Wolf service · Cupertino

Wolf range, oven & cooktop repair in Cupertino

Wolf is the premium sibling of Sub-Zero, and it usually lives in the same Apple-area kitchen. The crew that services your built-in fridge fixes the range too.

We repair Wolf dual-fuel and gas ranges, sealed-burner rangetops, induction cooktops and M- and E-series wall ovens across Cupertino. Typical faults are clicking-but-no-light igniters, a stuck red control knob, a drifting oven thermostat or sensor, a noisy convection fan and failing control boards. We diagnose to factory spec, install genuine OEM Wolf parts, and the same visit can cover the Sub-Zero beside it. The $89 service call is waived when you book the repair, backed by a 365-day labor warranty.

925 reviews · 4.9 / 5
Wolf professional dual-fuel range with red control knobs in a high-end Cupertino remodel kitchen
Why Wolf and Sub-Zero go together

The same hands that service your Sub-Zero

In most Cupertino remodels, Wolf and Sub-Zero are bought as a set — the integrated, panel-ready refrigeration from Sub-Zero and the cooking suite from Wolf, all behind custom cabinetry near Apple Park. Because they share an owner and a service standard, it makes sense to have one experienced specialist handle both. When we come for a range fault, we can check the built-in fridge in the same visit so you book one appointment instead of two.

Wolf cooking equipment is built to a professional spec, which is exactly why a backyard fix rarely sticks. The igniters, valves, thermostats and control boards are matched to tight tolerances, and the red control knobs are a signature part that has to seat and click correctly. We work to manufacturer-recommended procedures with factory-grade tools and install factory-certified, genuine OEM parts so the repair holds and the cosmetics stay perfect on a six-figure kitchen.

Wolf and Sub-Zero are used here descriptively for the appliances we service. We are an independent repair specialist with deep hands-on experience across both lines.

Model families

Wolf model families & the faults we see most

A quick map of the Wolf lines in Cupertino kitchens and the parts that usually fail on each.

Wolf familyWhat it isTypical faults we repair
Dual-fuel range (DF)Gas burners over an electric convection ovenIgniter no-light, oven sensor / thermostat drift, convection fan, red-knob valve
Gas range (GR)All-gas sealed burners and a gas ovenSpark module clicking, weak flame, bake / broil igniter, safety valve
Sealed-burner rangetop (SRT)Cooktop-only gas surface, no ovenSingle burner won't light, uneven flame, sparker shorting, knob bezel
Induction cooktop (CI / CT)Glass-top electric induction surfaceWon't recognize pans, error codes, control board, cooling fan, touch panel
M & E-series wall ovensBuilt-in single and double ovensWon't hold temperature, sensor fault, control board, door hinge, fan motor

Families and faults are typical for Wolf equipment in Cupertino; your exact part is confirmed on site after a factory-spec diagnosis.

Common repairs

Wolf repairs we handle every week

From a burner that clicks but won't light to an oven that runs hot, here is what we fix most on Wolf cooking equipment.

Igniters & spark modules

Clicking with no flame is usually a worn igniter, a fouled spark electrode or a tired spark module — the most common Wolf range call we get.

Burner valves & red knobs

A knob that spins freely, sticks, or leaks gas at low simmer points to the valve behind the signature red control. We reseat or replace with OEM parts.

Oven thermostat & sensor

If the oven runs hot, cold, or never reaches temperature, the RTD sensor or thermostat has usually drifted out of spec. We verify with factory-spec readings.

Convection fan motor

A grinding, humming or dead convection fan kills even baking. We replace the motor and confirm airflow and bearing noise are back to factory behavior.

Control boards

Blank displays, phantom error codes and unresponsive touch panels on induction and dual-fuel models trace to the control board. We prove it electrically before quoting.

Induction surface faults

Cooktops that won't recognize pans, throw fault codes, or shut down on heat point to the coil, cooling fan or board. We diagnose the glass-top safely.

Pricing

What Wolf repairs typically cost in Cupertino

Most Wolf calls are igniters, sensors, valves or boards. The $89 service call is waived when you book the repair, and every job carries a 365-day labor warranty.

ServiceRangeTimeNotes
Diagnostic / service call$8945–90 minWaived when you book the repair — full Wolf diagnosis, igniters, knobs and board check
Igniter / spark module$210–$5401–2 hBurner or oven igniter; spark module if clicking persists
Burner valve / red-knob service$240–$6201–2 hReseat or replace the valve behind the control knob
Oven sensor / thermostat$260–$6801–3 hRTD sensor or thermostat after a factory-spec reading
Convection fan motor$320–$7801–3 hMotor and bearing, with airflow verified
Control board$380–$1,3001–4 hDual-fuel or induction board, quoted after electrical proof

Draft ranges for planning; final quote depends on model, parts and diagnosis. See full pricing on the Sub-Zero repair pricing page.

Process

How to identify your Wolf range or oven fault before calling

A quick look before you call helps us arrive with the right Wolf part.

  1. 01

    Watch the ignition

    Note whether the burner clicks with no flame, lights weakly, or does nothing — that separates an igniter from a valve issue.

  2. 02

    Check oven temperature

    Test the oven with an independent thermometer to see if it runs hot, cold, or never reaches the set point.

  3. 03

    Read any error codes

    Photograph induction or display error codes; they point us toward the sensor, board or cooling fan.

  4. 04

    Find your model number

    Locate the Wolf model and serial on the rating plate so the correct igniter, sensor or valve is brought to the visit.

Quick answers

Quick answers about Wolf repair

The fast facts Cupertino owners ask before booking a Wolf range, oven or cooktop visit.

My Wolf burner clicks but won't light — is that serious?

Usually no. Persistent clicking with no flame is most often a worn igniter, a food-fouled spark electrode, or a failing spark module. It is one of the most common and least expensive Wolf repairs when caught early, and we carry the common igniters on the van.

Do you fix Wolf induction cooktops, not just gas ranges?

Yes. We service Wolf induction and electric cooktops alongside the gas and dual-fuel lines — pan-recognition faults, error codes, cooling fans, touch panels and control boards. The glass surface needs careful handling, which is exactly why a specialist is worth the call.

Can you service the Sub-Zero in the same visit?

That is the whole point of one crew. If your Wolf range and Sub-Zero built-in are both acting up, mention it when you book and we will look at both — one appointment, one trip charge, no second wait.

Are the red control knobs repairable, or do they need replacing?

Often the knob is fine and the valve behind it is the issue. We reseat or replace the burner valve and refit the genuine red control so it clicks and seats correctly. We only replace the knob itself if it is cracked or stripped.

Do you use genuine Wolf parts?

Always. We install factory-certified, genuine OEM Wolf parts so the repair meets service specifications and protects the cosmetics of a premium kitchen. Every part and the labor are covered by our 365-day warranty.

Reviews

What Cupertino homeowners say

925 reviews · 4.9 / 5
Our Wolf dual-fuel range kept clicking but the front burner wouldn't light. The tech traced it to a worn igniter and spark module, had the genuine parts on the van, and fixed it in under an hour. The $89 call came off the bill and the red knobs feel perfect again.
Elise M. Monta Vista, Cupertino · Wolf
Wolf wall oven was running 40 degrees hot and ruining everything I baked. They checked the sensor to factory spec, found it had drifted, and replaced it with an OEM part. Honest, tidy, and they even looked at our Sub-Zero while they were here. 365-day warranty sealed it.
Gordon F. Saratoga · Wolf
Induction cooktop stopped recognizing pans and threw an error code right before a dinner. They diagnosed the control board, proved it electrically before quoting, and handled the glass top carefully. No upsell, genuine Wolf part, and same crew handles our built-in fridge too.
Naomi T. Rancho Rinconada, Cupertino · Wolf
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What Wolf appliances do you repair in Cupertino?

We repair the full Wolf cooking line: dual-fuel (DF) and gas (GR) ranges, sealed-burner rangetops (SRT), induction and electric cooktops, and M- and E-series wall ovens. Typical faults are igniters and spark modules, burner valves behind the red knobs, oven sensors and thermostats, convection fan motors and control boards — all repaired with genuine OEM Wolf parts.

Why does my Wolf oven run hot or never reach temperature?

That almost always points to the oven temperature sensor (RTD) or the thermostat drifting out of spec, though a failing control board or bake igniter can mimic it on gas models. We confirm with factory-spec resistance and temperature readings before replacing anything, so you pay for the part that is actually wrong.

Is one company really better for both Wolf and Sub-Zero?

Yes, when they are this closely related. Wolf and Sub-Zero share an owner, a service standard and the same kind of premium tolerances. Using one specialist for both means a single appointment, consistent OEM parts, and a technician who already knows your kitchen layout and cabinetry constraints near Apple Park.

How much does a typical Wolf repair cost?

Most Wolf calls fall between $210 and $780 for igniters, valves, sensors and fan motors, with control boards higher after we prove the fault electrically. The $89 service call is waived when you book the repair, you get a written quote before any work, and the labor is backed by a 365-day warranty.

My Wolf burner lights but the flame is weak or uneven — what is it?

A weak or lopsided flame usually means a clogged burner port, a misaligned cap, or a valve that is no longer metering gas correctly at the simmer setting. We clean and reseat the burner, test the valve to factory spec, and replace it with a genuine OEM part if it is worn — restoring an even, controllable flame.

Can you come same-day for a Wolf range in Cupertino?

Often, yes. We hold same-day and next-day windows for Cupertino and nearby cities like Sunnyvale, Saratoga and Los Altos when the schedule allows. Call early with your Wolf model number ready, and we will bring the common igniters, sensors and valves so most repairs finish on the first visit.

Wolf acting up? Let's get the kitchen back.

Talk to an experienced Wolf and Sub-Zero specialist now. Same-day and next-day windows across Cupertino and the South Bay when the schedule allows — one crew for the whole suite.

925 reviews · 4.9 / 5
(650) 668-5618 Book online

$89 service call, waived when you book the repair · 365-day warranty on all labor.