Wolf Range & Cooktop Repair Denver — Dual-Fuel, Gas, Sealed Burner

Last updated: May 19, 2026 · Reviewed by Victor, EPA 608 Universal Certified

DF-30, DF-36, DF-48, DF-60, GR-series, M-series, ICBSRT, and CG-series cooktops. Spark modules, hot surface igniters, infrared broiler elements, and dual-stacked burner service. Same-day in your Denver home.

Schedule a Repair (720) 447-8577

What Wolf repair in Denver looks like

Wolf range and cooktop repair in Denver is an in-home service covering DF-30, DF-36, DF-48, DF-60 dual-fuel ranges, GR-series all-gas ranges, M-series wall ovens, ICBSRT rangetops, and CG-series cooktops. Victor — Spark electrodes, hot surface igniters, door gaskets, and infrared broiler elements with OEM Wolf parts. 1-year warranty, same-day. 5.0 from 121 Google reviews.

Wolf cooking platforms require the right tech

Wolf builds professional-grade cooking equipment with commercial DNA — dual-stacked sealed burners, infrared broilers, twin convection fans, and gas safety valves that demand a technician who understands how each subsystem talks to the spark module. I’m EPA 608 Universal certified and experienced with the entire Wolf lineup. OEM spark electrodes, hot surface igniters, and CG-series knob assemblies on the truck. No shop visits, no guesswork.

Gas-Certified

Experienced with gas appliance repair

Same-Day Service

Mon–Fri 8:30 AM–8:00 PM

1-Year Warranty

Parts and labor

5.0 from 121 Reviews

Verified Google reviews

Wolf models Serviced in Denver

Dual-Fuel Ranges (DF-30, DF-36, DF-48, DF-60)

The flagship Wolf platform: gas cooktop with electric convection oven. DF-30 is the 30″, DF-36 is the most common size in Denver kitchens, DF-48 adds the infrared griddle or charbroiler, and DF-60 is the dual-oven monster. These use hot surface igniters on the oven side, spark electrodes on the cooktop, and dual convection fans. Service covers every component — from the spark module to the bake element.

All-Gas Ranges (GR-Series)

GR-304, GR-364, GR-486, GR-606 — the all-gas platform. These run gas burners on the cooktop and a gas oven below. Common service: spark electrode replacement, gas safety valve diagnostics, infrared broiler element, and convection fan motor. The all-gas Wolf is one of the most repairable ranges ever built — everything unbolts.

Sealed-Burner Rangetops (ICBSRT, SRT-364, SRT-484)

The Wolf sealed burner rangetop installs into a countertop cutout above an independent wall oven. Same dual-stacked burner technology as the full ranges. The most common service issues are spark electrode tip wear, knob valve stem leakage, and burner cap alignment. ICBSRT burner caps and electrodes kept in stock.

M-Series Wall Ovens (M-30, MO-30, M-Series Convection)

Wolf’s wall ovens are pure electric with dual convection. M-30 single, MO-30 double oven, M-series convection in 27″ and 30″ sizes. Most common service: door gasket replacement, bake element, convection fan motor, and the touch-control board. The infrared broiler element is the highest-cost component at $300–$500 installed.

CG-Series Gas Cooktops (CG-304, CG-365, CG-484, CG-486)

Drop-in gas cooktops with the same sealed burner technology as the full Wolf ranges. These are common in Denver island installations. Service issues are nearly identical to ICBSRT — spark electrodes, valve stems, burner caps. Wolf induction cooktops are also serviced (CT-15I, CT-30I) with their power module and coil diagnostics.

Most Common Wolf Repairs

Spark electrode / spark module failure (every Wolf, year 6–12)

The #1 Wolf service call. Spark electrodes wear down from cooking debris and the porcelain tip cracks. If one burner won’t spark, it’s usually the electrode. If multiple burners click weakly or continuously, it’s the spark module. OEM electrode replacement is $180–$220; spark module replacement is $250–$320. Both are stocked on the truck for DF-30/36/48 and all CG/SRT cooktops.

Hot surface igniter (dual-fuel oven side, year 7–10)

On the DF-30, DF-36, DF-48, and DF-60, the oven side is gas-fired and uses a hot surface igniter (HSI). When the oven won’t reach temperature or takes 25 minutes to preheat, the HSI has lost amperage draw. OEM Wolf HSI replacement runs $180–$280 installed. Current draw is tested with a clamp meter before replacement to confirm the diagnosis.

Door gasket (year 8–12, all ovens)

The Wolf oven door gasket runs around the entire door perimeter and seals the convection cavity. After repeated thermal cycles, the silicone breaks down or pulls away from the corners. Symptoms: heat escapes around the door, longer preheat times, and condensation on adjacent cabinetry. OEM gasket replacement is $220–$350 depending on the model.

Infrared broiler element (year 10–15)

Wolf’s ceramic infrared broiler is the signature feature of the M-series and DF-series ovens. After a decade of use the ceramic plate can crack or the heating element opens. Replacement is $300–$500 installed — pricier than a standard broiler element but still a strong repair on a $12K appliance.

Convection fan motor (year 10–14)

The dual convection fans in Wolf ovens run at high RPM through every cooking cycle. When the bearings start to fail, you’ll hear a whine or rattle, and eventually uneven baking. OEM fan motor replacement is $250–$380. Fan blade balance is always checked after install.

Wolf range repair pricing in Denver

Firm quote before work starts. Parts and labor included.

$75 service visit fee is waived when you proceed with the repair. Most Wolf repairs run $180–$500.
Service Typical Cost
Service visit (waived with repair)$75
Spark electrode replacement$180–$220
Hot surface igniter (oven)$180–$280
Spark module replacement$250–$320
Door gasket replacement$220–$350
Convection fan motor$250–$380
Bake element replacement$220–$320
Infrared broiler element$300–$500
Gas safety valve replacement$320–$480
Touch control board$400–$700

The “$200 repair on a 12-year Wolf” rule

A new Wolf DF-36 dual-fuel range installed in Denver runs $10,000–$13,000. A DF-48 with griddle or charbroiler hits $14,000–$16,000. The 60″ DF-60 lands north of $18,000. Wall ovens are $7,000–$10,000 for the M-series.

Wolf cooking equipment is designed for 20+ year service life. The chassis is heavy-gauge steel. The gas valves are field-rebuildable. The igniter assemblies are modular. There’s nothing on a Wolf range that’s engineered as disposable. Even the touch-control boards on the M-series can be repaired by board-level swap rather than full assembly replacement.

The rule for Wolf: a $200 repair on a 12-year-old Wolf is never a question. A $400 repair on a 15-year Wolf is still the right call. A $700 repair on an 18-year Wolf needs a quick chat about overall condition — but the answer is still usually repair.

The math is simple: replacement is 20–40x the cost of any single major repair. Wolf customers who keep their ranges maintained typically see them outlast the kitchen remodel that originally housed them.

Wolf service area

Denver and the South Metro — same-day Monday through Friday.

Denver Highlands Ranch Littleton Centennial Lone Tree Englewood Aurora Parker Castle Rock

Wolf repair FAQ

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$75 service visit waived with repair. 1-year warranty on parts and labor. 5.0 from 121 Google reviews.