Replace a La Cornue Gas Valve
Replace a La Cornue Gas Valve is a common question among La Cornue owners. This guide walks through it step by step with technician-grade detail.
Gas valves control the flow of gas to burners and the oven on a La Cornue range. When one fails, the burner or oven won’t heat properly — and a valve that won’t fully close can leak. This guide explains the repair and why it must be done professionally.
What the gas valve does
Each burner has a valve operated by its knob; the oven has a safety valve that opens only when the igniter draws enough current. The valve meters gas and seals it off when closed. A worn or failed valve can cause: a burner that won’t light or won’t adjust, an oven that won’t heat despite a glowing igniter, a stiff knob, or a gas smell from incomplete closure.
Symptoms of a failing valve
- Oven igniter glows but no flame (safety valve not opening) — see our oven igniter guide.
- Burner won’t light despite a clean burner and good spark — see our range won’t light checklist.
- Stiff or stuck knob — see our stuck knob guide.
- Gas odor near a burner — treat as an emergency per our gas smell safety guide.
Why this is not a DIY job
Replacing a gas valve means shutting off and disconnecting the gas, removing the old valve, installing the correct genuine replacement, and — critically — leak-testing every joint afterward. Gas-connection work is governed by safety codes and carries fire and carbon-monoxide risk if done incorrectly. It requires a certified technician with leak-detection equipment.
The replacement process (overview)
- The technician shuts off gas and verifies it is off.
- The faulty valve is identified and removed.
- The correct genuine La Cornue valve for your model is installed — see our parts sourcing guide.
- All connections are leak-tested.
- Burners/oven are tested for a proper blue flame and correct operation.
Repair, not replace
A gas valve is a serviceable part — never a reason to replace the range. For pricing context, quoted “from $X,” see our repair cost guide.
Professional service
For safe gas valve replacement and leak testing, schedule a certified technician. Manufacturer and part details are on lacornueusa.com.
Confirm it is the valve, not something cheaper
Valve symptoms overlap with simpler, less expensive faults, so confirm before replacing. An oven igniter that glows but produces no flame can be a weak igniter rather than a failed safety valve — see our oven not heating guide. A surface burner that won’t light may just have clogged ports or moisture, per our range won’t light checklist. A stiff knob often means a dried valve that needs re-greasing, not replacement. A technician rules these out first so you do not pay for a valve you did not need.
The leak test is the point
What makes valve replacement strictly professional is not the swap itself but everything around it: shutting off and disconnecting the gas, installing the correct genuine valve for your model, and leak-testing every joint afterward with proper equipment. Gas-connection work is governed by safety codes and carries fire and carbon-monoxide risk if done wrong. If you ever smell gas, treat it as an emergency per our gas smell safety guide.
Frequently asked
- Is a failed valve a reason to replace the range? Never — it is a serviceable part, quoted “from $X”; see our repair cost guide.
- Surface valve or oven safety valve? Each burner has its own valve; the oven’s safety valve opens only when the igniter draws enough current.
The replacement process, in brief
A technician follows a strict sequence: shut off the gas and verify it is off, identify and remove the faulty valve, install the correct genuine La Cornue valve for your model, leak-test every connection, and finally test the burners or oven for a proper blue flame and correct operation. The leak test is the whole point — gas-connection work carries fire and carbon-monoxide risk if done wrong, which is why it requires a certified technician with leak-detection equipment rather than a DIY attempt. A valve is a serviceable part quoted “from $X,” never a reason to replace the range.