Rice Cooker Keeps Bubbling Over? Causes and How to Fix It

A rice cooker that bubbles over usually has too much starch, an overfilled pot, or a thermostat that won’t switch to warm. Here’s how to fix it.

By
Kris Escueta
rice cooker keeps bubbling

Watching starchy water froth out from under the lid and pool on your counter? A rice cooker that keeps bubbling over is messy, but it is almost always down to starch, water level, or a cooker that will not cycle down to warm.

Here is why a rice cooker boils over and how to keep it contained.

This article will teach you:

  • Why starchy water foams over
  • How rinsing and water level help
  • What to check on the cooker
  • When a part has failed

Why the Rice Cooker Bubbles Over

  • Unrinsed rice releasing excess starch that foams.
  • Overfilling past the recommended line.
  • Too much water for the rice type.
  • A thermostat stuck on cook that keeps boiling instead of switching to warm.

What You’ll Need

  • A fine mesh strainer
  • A measuring cup
  • Your owner’s manual

How to Stop a Rice Cooker From Bubbling Over

  1. Rinse the rice. Rinse until the water runs mostly clear to remove surface starch.
  2. Respect the fill line. Do not fill past the maximum mark for your rice quantity.
  3. Adjust the water. Use the correct ratio for the rice type you are cooking.
  4. Watch the cycle. If it keeps boiling and never clicks to warm, the thermostat may be stuck.

Pro Tip: Rinsing rice before cooking is the single most effective fix for boil-overs. The cloudy water you rinse away is the starch that foams up and escapes the lid.

When to Look a Little Deeper

Because overflow, scorching, and leaks are related, it helps to compare symptoms, and reviewing a cooker that burns rice or a leaking lid can point to the cause. A blocked steam path covered in a clogged steam vent also forces water out the sides.

When to Call a Pro

If you rinse, measure correctly, and the vent is clear but it still boils over, the thermostat is not cycling down. Replacing the cooker is usually the practical fix.

Wrapping Up

Boil-overs are usually starch and water level. Here’s the recap:

  • Rinse the rice until clear.
  • Stay under the fill line.
  • Use the correct water ratio.
  • Suspect the thermostat if it never switches to warm.

Rinse and measure first, and the mess usually stops. You’ve got this.