Thermador wall oven not heating: where to start
When a Thermador wall oven won’t heat, the cause is usually one of three things: a failed heating element, a faulty temperature sensor, or a control board relay that isn’t sending power to the element. Before calling for service, perform these safe checks to narrow down the issue.
Check the basics
Verify the oven isn’t in Sabbath mode, demo mode, or delay start. These modes prevent heating and are sometimes activated accidentally. Check your circuit breaker — Thermador wall ovens require a dedicated 240V circuit. If the breaker has tripped, reset it and test. If it trips again immediately, do not keep resetting — this indicates a short circuit that needs professional diagnosis.
Test bake vs broil
If the oven won’t heat in bake mode but works in broil mode, the bake (bottom) element has failed — error code E4. If it bakes but won’t broil, the broil (top) element has failed — error code E5. If neither works, the issue is likely the control board or temperature sensor, not the elements.
Look for error codes
E1 or E3 = temperature sensor fault (open or short circuit). The oven cannot regulate heat without a working sensor — using it risks overheating. E4/E5 = element failure. No code but no heat = control board relay or wiring issue.
Visual inspection
Look at the bake element (bottom of oven) and broil element (top). A burned-through element will have a visible crack, hole, or blister. If you see damage, the element needs replacement — this confirms the diagnosis.
When to call a technician
Any error code, both elements non-functional, or a tripping breaker all require professional service. Schedule service online — our technicians carry the most common Thermador oven elements and sensors in their service vehicle.
Related Thermador resources
- Thermador Oven repair service — certified technicians in all 50 states
- Thermador error code database — search all Oven error codes
- Thermador model database — specifications and repair info by model number
- Thermador official site — official specifications, manuals, and product information
Important notes for Thermador oven owners
- Always use genuine OEM parts — aftermarket components may fit but can compromise performance, safety, and warranty coverage on Thermador appliances
- Never ignore error codes — Thermador codes are diagnostic aids designed to prevent small issues from becoming major failures. Address them promptly
- Keep your owners manual accessible — it contains model-specific maintenance schedules and troubleshooting trees. Digital versions are available on the Thermador official site
- Document issues before calling — note error codes, symptoms, when they started, and patterns. This helps the technician diagnose faster
- Use surge protectors — power fluctuations damage electronic control boards. A quality surge protector protects your investment
When DIY troubleshooting is not enough
Some Thermador oven issues can be resolved with the steps in this guide. However, call a certified technician immediately if you encounter:
- Gas smell (gas models) — turn off the appliance, open windows, leave the house, call from outside
- Burning smell or smoke — disconnect power immediately. Do not use until inspected
- Electrical sparking — turn off at the circuit breaker. Wiring or component failure
- Water leaking inside walls — shut off supply and call to prevent water damage
- Error codes that return after power reset — persistent codes indicate real component failure
- Sealed system issues — compressor, refrigerant work requires EPA-certified technicians
Schedule service online — our factory-certified Thermador technicians carry genuine OEM parts and serve all 50 states with a 30-day labor warranty.