A whirlpool radiant cooktop element not heating sends a clear diagnostic signal depending on whether one zone or all zones are affected. Whirlpool ceramic-glass radiant cooktops (WCE series) use coiled elements under the glass that glow to heat the surface. When one stays cold while the rest work, the problem is local to that element; when every element is cold, the problem is power or control. This guide helps you read which it is before calling for service.
Why a Whirlpool radiant cooktop element not heating happens
A single dead zone usually means the radiant element itself has burned out (an open circuit, just like a failed oven element) or the infinite switch behind that knob has failed and is not sending power to the element. Elements also fail partially — heating weakly or only on high. If all elements are dead, the most common causes are a tripped or half-tripped double-pole breaker (radiant cooktops need both 120V legs of a 240V supply), a loose connection at the junction box, or a control board fault. The FlexHeat dual and triple elements on higher Whirlpool models add a second or third coil that can fail independently of the main ring.
Steps to try yourself
- Map the symptom: turn each zone to high and note which heat. One cold zone is local; all cold is power or control.
- For a single cold zone, swap nothing yet — check whether a FlexHeat zone heats on its small ring but not its large ring (or vice versa), which points to a partial element failure.
- For all zones cold, check the breaker. A double-pole breaker can trip on just one leg, leaving the display lit but no element heat. Reset it fully (off, then on).
- Confirm the surface is clean and the hot-surface indicator behaves normally — a stuck indicator can accompany a sensor issue.
- Never use the cooktop if the glass is cracked; stop and have it serviced.
When to call a technician
Replacing a radiant element or an infinite switch involves removing the glass top and working with 240V wiring under the surface — this is where most owners are right to stop. You can schedule a Whirlpool cooktop repair and a technician will test the element resistance and switch, and verify the supply legs. Our Whirlpool cooktop repair overview explains the typical diagnosis for a dead element. Repairs use genuine OEM parts and include a 30-day labor warranty.
An element that cycles on and off is not always broken
Many owners think a radiant element is failing because it glows, goes dark, then glows again on a medium setting — but that cycling is exactly how a radiant cooktop holds a chosen heat level. The infinite switch behind the knob turns the element on and off in a duty cycle, glowing fully on high and barely at all on low. So an element pulsing on a medium setting is working as designed. A genuine fault looks different: an element that never glows at all, one that only works on the highest setting (a failing switch losing its lower steps), or one that glows but produces little heat. Knowing the normal cycling behavior keeps you from chasing a non-problem. Also remember the hot-surface indicator stays lit until the glass cools well after the element shuts off — that residual-heat warning is a safety feature, not a sign the element is stuck on.
How to prevent element failure
Use flat-bottomed cookware sized to the element so heat transfers evenly, avoid dragging heavy pots that can crack the glass, and clean with cooktop-safe products so residue does not bake onto the surface and trap heat against the element. For your model element layout and care instructions, see whirlpool.com.