LG Oven Won’t Turn On — What’s Happening
When an LG oven won’t turn on, you’re looking at one of two problems: either the unit has no display and no power at all, or the display lights up but the oven won’t heat or start a cycle. LG treats this as a no-power or no-start troubleshooting issue rather than a single fault code. The diagnostic path depends on whether you see any lights or control response.
If the display is completely dark, the problem is upstream in the power supply or control board. If the display works but the oven won’t heat, the failure is in the sensor, heating element, igniter, or relay circuitry. LG’s support materials break diagnosis into these two branches because the causes and fixes are different.
Most Likely Causes
- Tripped breaker or no power at the outlet LG lists interrupted supply power as the first check for ovens that won’t turn on or heat.
- Failed heating element (electric ovens) A broken bake or broil element is a common cause when an electric LG oven powers up but won’t heat.
- Weak or failed igniter (gas ovens) The igniter is the most common failure point in gas ovens that have power and gas but won’t heat.
- Faulty oven temperature sensor or thermistor LG lists a bad sensor as a recurring cause of range and oven errors, including no-heat conditions.
- Low voltage at the unit LG identifies low voltage as an error condition that can prevent the oven from operating normally.
- Loose wiring or bad connector Damaged harness connections between the control board and heating components can block power to the oven.
- Failed control board or relay When basic checks pass, a dead relay or board circuit is the next-step diagnosis for no-turn-on symptoms.
How to Diagnose and Fix
- Identify whether the display is completely dark or whether it lights up but the oven won’t heat.
- Turn off the circuit breaker for the range, wait 30 seconds, turn it back on, and retry the oven.
- If an error code appears on the display, write down the exact code and look it up in the LG manual for code-specific diagnosis.
- For electric ovens, inspect the bake and broil elements for visible breaks or blistering, then test continuity across each element with a multimeter.
- For gas ovens, turn on the oven and watch whether the igniter glows bright orange and whether gas ignites within 90 seconds (if not, the igniter or its control circuit has failed).
- Test the oven temperature sensor with a multimeter at room temperature (technicians typically expect around 1,000 to 1,100 ohms, though LG does not publish a factory spec in available support documents).
- Check all wiring harnesses and connectors between the control board, sensor, and heating components for looseness or corrosion.
- Replace only the component confirmed faulty by testing, then restore power and verify normal oven operation.
Parts You Might Need
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| LG oven bake element | Amazon | Match your model number for correct wattage and mounting. |
| LG oven temperature sensor | Amazon | Usually a two-wire thermistor mounted inside the oven cavity. |
| LG oven igniter (gas models) | Amazon | Confirm round versus flat style before ordering. |
| LG range control board | Amazon | Required only when all other components test good and the board shows no relay click or output. |
Related Error Codes
If your appliance also shows a code on the display, these match this problem:
- Lg Oven F1 error code
- Lg Oven F10 error code
- Lg Oven F11 error code
- Lg Oven F12 error code
- Lg Oven F17 error code
- Lg Oven F19 error code
- Lg Oven F2 error code
- Lg Oven F3 error code
- Lg Oven F4 error code
- Lg Oven F5 error code
- Lg Oven F6 error code
- Lg Oven F7 error code
When to Call a Pro
Call a pro if you have a gas oven and are not comfortable working around gas supply lines or verifying igniter glow and flame behavior. Also call a technician if the breaker trips repeatedly when you restore power, if you measure low voltage at the outlet (below 240 V on a double-pole circuit), or if all heating components and the sensor test good but the oven still won’t start. Control board diagnosis and replacement require disassembly and live-voltage checks that are best handled by a qualified service technician. For gas line, burner, or igniter work, or if you ever smell gas, stop and call a licensed technician.