Match your symptom to narrow down the likely cause before calling us.
These checks are safe for homeowners. Do not attempt to open sealed refrigerant systems, touch electrical components behind access panels, or work on gas lines — always call a licensed technician for those.
Ensure there's at least 3 inches of clearance above and on the sides of a countertop microwave. Check that the ventilation slots on top and back are not blocked by cabinets, paper towels, or other items. For over-the-range units, ensure the exhaust fan is functioning and the vent filters are clean.
Avoid running a microwave continuously for more than 20 minutes. The magnetron generates significant heat, and the cooling fan has limits. If you're doing large batch cooking, pause between cycles to let the unit cool. Consistent shutoffs after extended use point to thermal protection triggering — improving ventilation often resolves this without any repair.
If the microwave shuts off at full power, try the same cook cycle at 50–70% power. If it completes normally at reduced power but always shuts off at high power, a high-voltage component (diode, capacitor, or magnetron) is failing under load. This pattern is very useful diagnostic information for a technician.
Wondering what microwave repair typically costs in Charlotte? See our full pricing breakdown with diagnostic fee policy and repair vs. replace benchmarks.
The most common causes are: a tripped thermal cutout (overheating — often from blocked vents or extended use), a failing door interlock switch that trips the safety shutoff mid-cycle, or a high-voltage component (diode or magnetron) that fails under load at full power. The pattern — whether it recovers after cooling, whether it happens at all power levels, and whether a door error appears — identifies which issue is present.
Yes — this is more common than most people expect. The magnetron generates significant heat, and the cooling fan exhausts it through ventilation slots. When those slots are blocked by items placed on top of or flush against the microwave, heat builds up rapidly. The thermal cutout trips to protect the magnetron, shutting off the unit. Clearing the vents and letting the unit cool often restores normal operation without any repair.
A thermal cutout (also called a thermal fuse) is a small safety device that interrupts power when the microwave exceeds a safe temperature. Some are one-time fuses that must be replaced once tripped; others are resettable thermostats. Replacement is typically $50–$100 in parts and labor. If a thermal fuse keeps tripping, the underlying heat source (blocked vents, failed cooling fan) must also be addressed.
Door switch replacement: $80–$150. Thermal cutout replacement: $80–$160. High-voltage diode or capacitor replacement: $100–$200. Control board replacement: $150–$300. HomeHeroes diagnoses the exact cause on the first visit and provides upfront pricing before any work begins.
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