How much does Frigidaire wall oven repair cost in Toronto?
Frigidaire wall oven repair in Toronto typically runs $250–$560 all-in, depending on the fault. The most common Frigidaire call-out is oven not heating at all ($250–$420). Every visit starts with a flat $149.95 diagnostic, credited 100% toward your repair, and repairs are backed by a warranty.
- Diagnostic
- $149.95, credited 100% toward your repair
- Warranty
- on parts & workmanship
- Availability
- Same-day & next-day appointments available
Prices in CAD for Toronto; typical ranges — your exact quote is confirmed on-site before any work. Updated .
Most Frigidaire wall oven faults in Toronto come down to a handful of parts — and the majority are worth repairing rather than replacing a 13–15 years appliance. Anthony is a Red Seal certified technician who carries the common wall oven parts on the van, so most Toronto jobs are diagnosed and fixed in a single visit.
How your repair works
Four simple steps, no surprises.
Book
Call or request a callback. Same-day & next-day appointments available.
Diagnose
A flat $149.95 diagnostic pinpoints the real fault.
Approve
You get an upfront all-in quote first — diagnostic credited 100% toward your repair.
Repaired
Fixed with OEM parts, backed by a 90-day warranty.
Frigidaire wall oven parts we stock
Frigidaire ranges and wall ovens are Electrolux NA platform (parent since 1986), sharing 316-prefix cooking parts with Electrolux-brand and Electrolux-built Kenmore 790 cooking units. They speak the Electrolux F-code dialect (F10/F11/F30/F31/F90), and their defining failure is the electronic oven control (EOC): a no-heat or false-overheat Frigidaire is the EOC or the RTD sensor far more often than the element. We meter the RTD and the element legs before condemning a board, because a drifted sensor and a welded EOC relay read very differently and only one is a fire concern. Parts channel is open — 316-prefix elements, sensors and lock motors are shelf-stocked, EOCs sometimes dealer-ordered or repairable.
Signature Frigidaire faults
- Bake element burn-through (open element) — oven powers up and display is normal but the cavity never warms; often a visible blister or break at the element loop (most common)
- EOC / electronic oven control relay fault — two modes: a welded-closed bake/broil relay drives a runaway overheat and an F10 / false-overheat shutdown (the fire-risk case), while a failed-open relay or dead board gives no heat in one or all modes, often with no code or a generic lockout (common — the signature Frigidaire fault)
- Oven temperature sensor (RTD) drift or open — oven under-heats, won't reach setpoint, or throws F30/F31 and stops to stay safe (common)
- Door-lock motor / self-clean latch fault (F90) — door stuck shut or self-clean aborts; oven can lock out heating until door state is confirmed (occasional)
- Shorted keypad / control panel (F11) — panel beeps or locks, a key reads as held down, bake won't engage (occasional)
| Part | OEM number | Price band |
|---|---|---|
| Oven bake element (2600W / 240V, push-on terminals; PS438018, AP2125026) | 316075103 | $45–$95 |
| Oven bake element, push-on-terminal variant (PS2332301, AP4356505) | 316075104 | $45–$95 |
| Oven temperature sensor / RTD probe (~1100 ohms at room temp; PS820208, AP3363354; replaces 316111203/318198500) | 316217002 | $25–$55 |
| Oven temperature sensor / RTD probe, alternate cavity (PS1528542) | 316490000 | $30–$60 |
| Electronic oven control (EOC; PS977998, AP3781481 — NLA on many models; source a replacement EOC by model/serial) | 316418720 | $180–$380 |
| Oven door-lock motor & switch assembly (self-clean latch; PS16555576, AP7017733; supersedes 316464300) | 5304528973 | $90–$170 |
Error codes we see on Frigidaire wall ovens
- F10
- Runaway / overheat temperature — control sees the cavity climbing abnormally and shuts down; most often a welded-closed bake/broil relay in the EOC, sometimes a shorted RTD (a true overheat is treated as a safety fault, never reset-and-return)
- F11
- Shorted or stuck keypad key — power down a few minutes to clear a false trip; persistent F11 is a keypad/overlay or EOC fault
- F30 / F31
- Open / shorted oven temperature sensor (RTD) circuit — check the sensor harness and plug, then replace sensor 316217002/316490000; EOC only if a known-good probe still codes
- F90
- Lock-motor switches not sensed in position — the self-clean latch code; points at door-lock motor 5304528973 when a breaker reset won't clear it
Why homeowners across Toronto call us
Every repair is led by Anthony, a Red Seal interprovincial journeyman who is 313A Licensed, TSSA Certified, ODP Certified, with his team working under his direct leadership — backed by $2,000,000+ general liability insurance and a 90-day workmanship warranty on every job.
Red Seal-led team
Every job is overseen by Anthony, a certified journeyman, and handled by his own trusted team.
Licensed & gas-certified
313A refrigeration licence and TSSA gas certification for safe, code-correct repairs.
$2,000,000+ insured
Fully insured for general liability, so your home is protected during the repair.
90-day warranty
Parts and workmanship are warrantied — if it's not right, we come back.
OEM parts on the van
Common parts are stocked, so most jobs are completed on the first visit.
Upfront pricing
A flat $149.95 diagnostic, credited 100% toward your repair, and a quote before any work.
What our credentials mean for you
- Red Seal Certified
- The interprovincial standard for skilled trades — a journeyman who passed the national appliance-service exam.
- 313A Licensed
- Ontario's refrigeration & air-conditioning systems mechanic licence — legally required to work on sealed cooling systems.
- TSSA Certified
- Technical Standards & Safety Authority gas certification — qualified to work safely on gas appliances.
- ODP Certified
- Ozone Depletion Prevention certification — licensed to handle refrigerants responsibly and to code.
Servicing Wall Ovens across Toronto
Frigidaire wall oven service in Toronto — the local specifics
- Frigidaire is Electrolux-NA mass-market in the GTA, so the 316-prefix oven heat parts move fast in Toronto: the 316075103 bake element (240V/2600W push-on terminals) and the 316217002 RTD temperature sensor behind the F30/F31 codes are common-failure SKUs that local distributors and the national OEM houses keep shelf-stocked, so a burned-out element or a drifted-sensor call is usually a same-day/next-day one-visit fix once the failure mode is metered on site. We decode the model before ordering, because the bake element runs as interchangeable variant SKUs (316075103 / 316075104) and the RTD splits by cavity (316217002 vs 316490000), so we confirm the right part for the build rather than guessing. The slow line is the electronic oven control (EOC, 316418720): it is NLA on many models, so an F10 overheat or dead-board call gets sourced by model and serial — dealer-ordered or board-repaired — rather than pulled off the van.
- The 316-prefix heat-side cluster stocks locally through the open Electrolux-NA channel that also serves the badge-shared Kenmore 790 and Electrolux cooking builds: the 316075103 / 316075104 bake elements, the 316217002 oven temperature sensor (Reliable Parts Canada lists it as a stocked, ready-to-ship item), and the 5304528973 self-clean door-lock motor and switch assembly (F90) are commodity OEM parts carried by Toronto-area wholesalers and the big online houses. The alternate-cavity RTD 316490000 is a genuine OEM part but a thinner Canadian-distributor item than the 316217002, so we confirm which sensor the cavity takes before rolling. The one part that is genuinely special-order is the 316418720 EOC — model-coded and NLA on many platforms — so we meter the $45–$95 element and the $25–$55 sensor first and never parts-cannon the board.
- A large share of Toronto Frigidaire and Gallery wall ovens — FFET/FGET single and double cavities and the PCFE/FPEW Professional builds — are built into cabinet columns in condos and older homes, so reaching the rear RTD and the EOC behind the trim takes cabinet clearance; for temp/overheat work we book the slot to actually pull the unit rather than diagnose blind. Electric ranges and wall ovens need a confirmed dedicated 240V circuit, and the gas FFGF/FGGH freestanding models are TSSA gas-fitter scope and run on Toronto natural gas unless a home is on a non-piped pocket converted to propane, which changes the orifice. Self-clean is the recurring aftermath call: a pyrolytic cycle that bakes the latch and stresses the 5304528973 lock motor will throw F90 and lock the door shut, and a genuine F10 runaway after self-clean is treated as a fire-safety fault — we prove the cause before re-energizing, never reset-and-return.
Parts & timing: Common parts typically same-day via Scarborough and North York distributor branches.
Costs for every common fault, plus the full coverage map and disposal rules, live on wall oven repair in Toronto and the Toronto hub.
More appliance repair in Toronto
Brands we service
Nearby cities
Frigidaire Wall Oven problems in Toronto
Frequently asked questions
How fast can you repair my Wall Oven in Toronto?
Do you charge for the diagnostic?
How soon can you come out?
Are you licensed and insured?
Do you use genuine parts?
Do you service Frigidaire wall ovens?
Need your Frigidaire wall oven fixed in Toronto?
Same-day & next-day appointments available. Flat $149.95 diagnostic, credited 100% toward your repair, and a 90-day warranty on every repair.
Call (647) 490-7878