
Oven/Stove Repair in Newton & Surrounding Areas, NJ
Same-day service, certified technicians, all major brands

Real Repairs by Our Technicians
Why Choose Boost Appliance Service?
20+ Years Experience
Over two decades repairing New Jersey's kitchen and laundry appliances. Factory-trained, certified technicians.
Same-Day Service
Same-day or next-day appointments available. We know you can't wait — we respond fast.
Trusted by Neighbors
Most new customers come from referrals. We fix it right the first time, every time.
Upfront Pricing
Transparent pricing and solid warranty on every repair. Fully insured for your peace of mind.
Brands We Service
Our certified technicians are trained to repair appliances from all major brands
Dmitry visited today and helped fixing GE oven. He was quick to diagnose issue and fixed it at reasonable price.
I haven't met a man as professional and honest as Alex in a long time. He really does the best in the interest of the customer.
Igor from Boost Appliance Service repaired my subzero refrigerator. He needed to order parts but in general the repair turned over was fast and my fridge is working perfectly right now. The best service in Morristown. Highly recommend!
I was very impressed with their great availability. They scheduled me in quickly and Ramiz was very knowledgeable and detail oriented. The error code we had was not appearing but he still spent 45 minutes making sure everything was checked. I appreciated his attention to detail and not just leaving when the error code wasn't there. We will definitely be returning customers!
A+++ Service. Boost Appliance Service is great. I called on Monday and Mr. Igor came the next day to repair the defrost sensor and drain line of my fridge, he also did thorough maintenance checks on my laundry dryer and laundry washer machine. 3 appliances all in one day. Highly recommended. Answered all my questions and showed me how to maintain my appliances. Thank you.
Eddie did an EXCELLENT job diagnosing, repairing and cleaning my washer and dryer. Completely disassembled it, made it run smoother than ever and made the inside shine like new.
Spring Street and High Street in Newton's Town Plot Historic District tell the whole story of this borough's kitchens in about half a block. You've got restored 19th-century row houses where the walls are original plaster and the range is a KitchenAid slide-in somebody dropped in during a renovation — and right next door, a place still running a 1990s GE freestanding unit that's been heating Sunday dinners for two decades. Both ovens break. The problems usually come down to three things: a burned-out bake element, a temperature sensor reading 50 degrees off, or a control board that quit after one too many Sussex County winters with the oven running six hours straight. Either way, we can usually get to you same day in 07860 and have a diagnosis within the hour. Call (660) 999-9960 to lock in your slot before the day fills up.
Newton Borough's housing stock is genuinely unusual for a town this size. The 1762 Town Plot survey grid — Church, Moran, Spring, and the surrounding streets — gave the borough a downtown where a Federal-period building sits directly across from a mid-century commercial conversion turned apartment. That variety shows up hard in the kitchens. Homes along the Town Plot core in 07860 often have wiring updated piecemeal over decades, and inconsistent voltage is brutal on modern oven control boards. Samsung and LG slide-in ranges, popular in renovated units near the Sussex County Courthouse area, are especially sensitive to power irregularities — their digital ignition systems and touchpad controllers don't tolerate voltage dips the way an older coil-top did. On the older residential blocks off Spring and Moran, Whirlpool and GE freestanding ranges dominate, and those fail at predictable wear points: the bake element, the door gasket, or the oven igniter on gas models. Knowing which type of kitchen you're walking into before we arrive lets us stock the right parts on the van.
Common Oven/Stove Issues in Newton
Oven Won't Reach Temperature — Bake Element Failure in Newton's GE Units
The most common call we get from Newton homeowners is an oven that runs but never actually hits temperature. Set it to 375°F, wait 20 minutes, it tops out around 290°F. On GE freestanding ranges — which are all over the older homes along Moran Street and the blocks just off Spring Street in 07860 — this almost always traces to a burned-out bake element or a faulty oven temperature sensor (also called an RTD probe). You can usually spot the element failure yourself: look for a visible crack or blister on the coil. The sensor is harder to confirm without a multimeter, but a room-temperature reading outside the 1,080–1,100 ohm range means the probe is bad. Replacement bake elements for GE run $25–$60 in parts; with labor, total repair typically lands at $110–$160. Same-day service is usually available — call (660) 999-9960 to confirm your slot.
Uneven Heating and Hot Spots — Convection Fan Motor Failure in KitchenAid Ranges
KitchenAid wall ovens and ranges show up frequently in the renovated homes near Newton's Town Plot Historic District, especially where kitchens got a full gut-renovation during a building repurpose. The most common complaint: one side of the oven chars while the other is barely cooked. On convection models, that pattern almost always points to a seized convection fan motor or a broken fan blade. The motor shaft corrodes and binds — particularly in units that see heavy use through Sussex County's long cold-weather cooking season. A healthy convection fan spins freely by hand; a seized one won't budge at all. Part costs for a KitchenAid convection fan motor run $70–$130 depending on the model; total repair with labor lands around $175–$240. If the fan checks out clean, the next culprit is a miscalibrated temperature sensor. Either way, most jobs close in a single visit.
Dead Broiler — Broil Element Burnout on Whirlpool Ranges
Broiler failures spike in fall and winter in Newton — makes sense, since people fire up the oven daily for roasting and braising through the cold months. On Whirlpool freestanding ranges, a dead broiler almost always means the broil element burned through. These elements run extremely hot and fail without much warning — fine one use, completely dead the next. The visual check is easy: pull the broil element out and look for a crack, hole, or charred section. Whirlpool broil elements are model-specific but typically run $30–$75 in parts. Full repair cost including labor usually comes in at $100–$165. If the element looks intact, the issue shifts to the oven control board or a failed broil relay — those repairs run higher, $200–$350, but still land well within the range where fixing beats buying a new unit.
Self-Clean Locks the Door and Won't Release — Samsung Latch Assembly Failure
This one generates the most panicked calls. The self-clean cycle runs on Samsung slide-in ranges — popular throughout Newton's 07860 zip in updated kitchens — and when it ends, the door latch assembly refuses to retract. The oven is locked shut, sometimes still warm, and the control panel is frozen. The culprit is usually a failed door lock motor or a cracked latch actuator arm inside the assembly. Occasionally it's a tripped thermal limiter that just needs to reset — unplug the unit for 10 minutes and try again. If that doesn't free the latch, the motor assembly needs replacement. Samsung door latch assemblies run $45–$90 in parts; total repair typically lands at $130–$195. Don't try forcing the door open — you'll crack the interior glass or bend the latch channel. Call (660) 999-9960 and we can usually get out the same day.
Gas Oven Won't Light — Weak Igniter on LG Ranges
Gas oven igniters are wear items, plain and simple. LG gas ranges show up frequently in the mid-range renovations around High Street and the downtown Newton corridor, and igniter failure is the number-one service call on those models. The igniter weakens gradually, then stops drawing enough current to open the gas valve. The oven clicks, smells faintly of gas, but never lights. A healthy igniter glows bright orange and lights the burner within 90 seconds; a weak one glows dull red-orange and just sits there. Testing with a clamp meter: a draw below 3.5 amps confirms the igniter is due for replacement. LG igniters run $25–$55 in parts, and total repair with labor is typically $110–$175. This is not a repair to defer — a persistently weak igniter that floods unburned gas into the oven cavity before eventually lighting is a safety problem, not just an inconvenience.
Frequently Asked Questions
How fast can you get to Newton for oven repair?▼
For most Newton calls in 07860, we can be there the same day — usually within two to three hours of your call on weekday mornings. Parking on the residential streets around the Town Plot area is generally easy, and we carry a stocked van, so most common part replacements happen on the first visit without a return trip. Evening slots are available Tuesday through Thursday if daytime doesn't work for you. Call (660) 999-9960 before noon and same-day service is almost always doable. Weekend appointments are available by request with a day's notice.
What does oven repair typically cost in Newton, NJ?▼
Most oven repairs in Newton run between $100 and $300 for parts and labor combined. A straightforward bake element swap on a GE or Whirlpool usually comes in at $110–$160 all in. Control board replacements sit at the higher end — $250–$400 depending on brand and part availability. Samsung and LG boards run a bit pricier because the parts cost more. We charge a diagnostic fee that applies toward the repair if you move forward, so the inspection call isn't a throwaway expense. Call (660) 999-9960 and we'll give you a firm price before any work starts — no surprises on the invoice.
Do older Newton homes with updated kitchens need anything special for oven service?▼
Sometimes, yes. Homes along Church Street and Spring Street in the Town Plot Historic District often have kitchens where the electrical panel was updated but the branch circuit feeding the range was not. A 240V range on an undersized or partially degraded circuit produces all kinds of odd control board behavior — error codes, random shutoffs, temperature inconsistency — that looks like an appliance fault but is actually a wiring problem. We check supply voltage at the outlet before diagnosing the oven itself. If the issue turns out to be electrical infrastructure rather than the appliance, we'll say so clearly and point you toward a licensed electrician rather than chase a phantom appliance problem that will keep recurring.
Can you repair built-in wall ovens, or only freestanding ranges?▼
Both. Built-in wall ovens are common in the more extensively renovated homes in Newton, and they're not harder to service — just different access. Bosch wall ovens show up in a fair number of the gut-renovated Town Plot properties, and we stock parts for those regularly. The repair process is the same: diagnose the failing component, source the part, replace it. Wall oven access sometimes means pulling the unit from the cabinet, which adds 20–30 minutes to the job. We account for that in the labor estimate up front, so there are no surprises. Call (660) 999-9960 to describe your setup and we'll confirm the scope before scheduling.
What warranty comes with your oven repair work?▼
Parts and labor are both warranted for 90 days from the repair date. Same component fails within that window — we come back at no charge. The warranty covers the specific repair performed, not a different component that fails later. For bake elements and igniters on Whirlpool and GE units, 90 days is well past the point where you'd know the repair held. Control board replacements carry the same coverage. We source parts from authorized distributors rather than gray-market suppliers, so part quality is consistent. If a board we installed fails within the warranty period, we replace it — no argument, no diagnosis fee.
Do you service towns near Newton, or just the borough itself?▼
We cover the surrounding Sussex County area on the same schedule. Andover, Sparta, Hardyston, Hampton, and Stanhope all fall within our standard service zone with the same same-day availability as Newton proper. Frankford and Branchville are a bit farther out but still on the regular route. If you're outside 07860 and unsure whether you're in our coverage area, call (660) 999-9960 and we'll give you a straight answer. Surrounding-town scheduling typically runs one to two days out, though same-day slots open up more often than you'd expect depending on the day's load.
Need Oven/Stove Repair in Newton?
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(551) 282-9561































