Turn the knob to off and the flame keeps burning, or the igniter keeps sparking? A burner that will not shut off is one of the few stove problems where safety comes first, because you have live gas you cannot control. The fix is usually a worn valve or switch, but start by making the situation safe.
Here is exactly what to do, in the right order.
This article will teach you:
- How to make a stuck burner safe right now
- Why a burner stays on or keeps sparking
- How to check the knob, valve, and switch
- When this is strictly a job for a pro
Make It Safe First
Before any diagnosis, stop the gas. Turn off the gas supply valve behind or beneath the range, switch off the range at the breaker, and open windows to ventilate. Do not leave an uncontrolled flame unattended.
Why a Gas Burner Won’t Turn Off
Ever notice the knob feels loose or spins past where off should be? That points to the cause. The common reasons are:
- A worn burner valve that no longer fully closes when you turn the knob.
- A stripped knob or valve stem so the knob turns without shutting the gas.
- A stuck igniter switch that keeps the spark firing even in the off position.
What You’ll Need
- A screwdriver
- A replacement knob, valve, or switch if needed
- Your owner’s manual
How to Diagnose It (With the Gas Off)
Ready? Only work on this with the gas supply and power off.
- Check the knob and stem. Pull off the knob and see whether the valve stem turns fully to off by hand. A stripped knob just needs replacing.
- Inspect the valve. If the stem turns to off but gas still flowed, the burner valve is worn and should be replaced.
- Look at the igniter switch if the spark, not the flame, is the problem. A stuck switch keeps clicking and may need replacing.
- Confirm the fix by restoring gas and power briefly and testing that the burner lights and fully shuts off.
Warning: If you cannot stop gas from flowing and cannot reach the supply valve, leave the home and call your gas utility’s emergency line. A burner you cannot shut off is not a wait-and-see problem.
When to Look a Little Deeper
A burner that sparks but will not behave often overlaps with ignition faults, so it helps to read why a gas burner will not ignite and this guide to common gas burner problems. If the clicking is the part that will not stop, the spark module may be the culprit.
Heat damage at the controls is a related warning sign, covered in why stove knobs get hot while cooking, and an off-color flame is its own safety flag, explained in why a yellow gas burner flame matters.
When to Call a Pro
Replacing a gas burner valve involves disconnecting gas lines. If you are not fully comfortable with that, or the burner will not shut off at all, this is the right time to bring in a qualified technician.
Wrapping Up
A burner that will not turn off is a safety-first fix. Here’s the short version:
- Shut off the gas supply and power, and ventilate.
- Check the knob and valve stem for a full off position.
- Replace a worn valve, stripped knob, or stuck switch.
- Call the gas utility if you cannot stop the flow.
Make it safe first, then fix the part. You’ve got this.