Furnace Troubleshooting Wizard Burlington, ON

Your Burlington home is at 15°C and dropping. Before calling anyone, run through this checklist — a clogged filter, a dead thermostat
battery, or a frozen condensate line can each look exactly like a furnace breakdown and cost nothing to fix.

🩺 Step-by-Step Diagnosis

⏱️ 5 Minutes

🔒 Free

🔥
Furnace Troubleshooting Wizard
Which furnace issue are you having? Answer a few quick questions to help identify the most likely cause of your furnace problem and what to do next.
What is the main issue you’re experiencing with your furnace?
What color is your furnace flame?
What sound do you hear from your furnace?
How is the heating performance?
When was your last professional maintenance?
Would you like to receive a free no-obligation estimate from our local contractor partners as well?
Great! Almost done, your result is on the next page.
Please enter your contact details so our Certified contractors can provide estimates as well.

By submitting this form, you are giving your consent to receive phone calls and text messages from our contractor partners.

You’re almost done! Where do we send the results?
Enter your details below to see your diagnosis. Fields are optional.
🔍 Diagnosis Complete

Get a Free Repair Estimate

Connect with certified local HVAC technicians who can diagnose and fix your furnace fast.

Get Free Quotes

Work Through These Six Checks Before Calling Anyone

Each check takes under two minutes. Completing all six means you’ve ruled out every common free fix — and if none resolves it, you’ll be able to describe the situation clearly to the technician, which shortens the diagnostic and often reduces the service call cost.

1

Thermostat — Fully
Confirm the mode is HEAT (not FAN or COOL or AUTO-cool). Confirm the set temperature is above the current room temperature — if the room is 19°C and the setpoint is 18°C, the furnace correctly isn’t running. Check the battery — wireless and smart thermostats with dead batteries display the setpoint normally but transmit no signal. If you have an Ecobee or Nest, check the app for any active schedule or away mode. A surprising percentage of Burlington January “furnace emergencies” are a thermostat battery.

2

Furnace Filter
A completely clogged furnace filter — common in Burlington homes that haven’t been serviced — restricts airflow until the heat exchanger overheats and the high-limit safety switch shuts the burner off. The furnace may restart briefly and shut off again repeatedly. Replace the filter, switch the thermostat to FAN ONLY for 15–20 minutes to allow the heat exchanger to cool, then switch back to HEAT. This fixes a large proportion of “furnace short-cycling” and “furnace not staying on” calls.

3

Breaker Panel and Furnace Switch
Your furnace uses 120V electricity for its controls, inducer motor, and blower — it’s a gas appliance, but electricity makes everything run. Find the furnace circuit in your panel (often labelled “Furnace” or “Air Handler”). A tripped breaker shuts everything off. Also check the furnace power switch — it looks like a standard light switch on the furnace housing or the nearby wall, and it’s easy to bump accidentally. If the breaker trips immediately after reset, stop — that’s an electrical fault; call a licensed electrician before touching it again.

4

Gas Supply Check
Is your Burlington stove or hot water heater getting gas? If nothing gas-fired is working, it’s an Enbridge supply interruption or the main gas shutoff is closed — call Enbridge Gas Distribution at 1-877-362-7434. If other appliances have gas but the furnace doesn’t, check the furnace’s dedicated gas shutoff valve (a handle-style valve on the gas line near the furnace unit). It should be parallel to the pipe when open. Perpendicular means closed — someone may have turned it off during a service call and not turned it back on.

5

Furnace Status / Error Light
Virtually all modern Burlington furnaces (post-1995) have a diagnostic LED visible through a small window on the furnace cabinet. It flashes a pattern that corresponds to a fault code listed on a sticker inside the panel door. Count the flashes carefully: for example, 3 short flashes might mean “pressure switch stuck open.” Write down the code and compare to the sticker. Photograph both the flash pattern (use slow-motion video on your phone) and the fault code sticker — this information dramatically speeds up the technician’s diagnosis if you do call.

6

Condensate Drain (High-Efficiency Furnaces Only)
96% AFUE furnaces produce liquid condensate — water extracted from flue gases — that must drain continuously during operation. This drain runs through a PVC tube, often to a floor drain or condensate pump. In Burlington’s January cold snaps, this drain can freeze solid where it passes through an unheated space (crawlspace, garage, exterior wall chase). A frozen condensate line triggers the furnace safety switch and shuts operation down. Find the drain tube and inspect for ice or blockage. Carefully thaw with warm (not boiling) water, then verify the line is flowing freely before restarting.

Burlington Furnace Symptom Quick-Reference

SymptomMost Likely CauseWhat to Do
Nothing runs at all — completely deadTripped breaker, furnace switch off, thermostat batteryCheck steps 1–3 above first
Fan runs but no heat, no ignitionIgniter failed, gas supply off, flame sensor dirtyCheck gas; then call tech
Tries to start 2–3 times then locks outFlame sensor fouled, gas pressure, weak igniterCheck filter; call tech
Starts and runs briefly, then shuts off repeatedlyClogged filter → high-limit switch trippingReplace filter; reset thermostat
Blows cool or lukewarm air onlyBurner not igniting, gas valve issueCheck gas supply; call tech
Furnace runs but rooms stay coldDuct leak, damper closed, undersized unitCheck all registers; call for assessment
Loud boom or bang on startupDelayed ignition — dirty burners or gas pressure issueTurn off; call tech — potential CO risk
Smell of gas near furnace or elsewhereGas leak in supply or combustion sectionEvacuate; call Enbridge 1-877-362-7434
CO detector alarmCracked heat exchanger or combustion backdraftEvacuate; call 911; then Enbridge
Grinding or high-pitched squealBlower or inducer motor bearing failingShut off; call tech — delay worsens damage
Water pooling near furnaceCondensate drain blocked (96% units)Clear the drain — see step 6 above

Burlington-Specific Winter Furnace Issues

Condensate line freezing in January cold snaps: Burlington’s mild-by-Ontario-standards winters don’t prevent the condensate drain problem. When temperatures drop to -12°C or lower for multiple days — as they do several times per year — any section of the condensate line in an unheated space can freeze. The solution long-term is heat tape on vulnerable sections; the immediate fix is careful thawing. If this happens repeatedly at the same location every winter, have a technician re-route the drain to a heated space.
Intake air pipe ice or obstruction: High-efficiency furnaces draw combustion air from outside through a separate PVC intake pipe — typically visible as two pipes exiting through your home’s exterior wall. In a heavy Burlington snowfall, these intake pipes can become blocked with snow or ice. A blocked intake prevents the furnace from drawing combustion air and causes a pressure switch fault (usually 3 flash codes). Check that both pipes are clear before assuming a component failure after any significant snowfall event.
Older Burlington homes and chimney backdraft: Pre-1990 Burlington homes with natural-draft furnaces and newer, tight replacement windows can develop combustion air starvation — the furnace can’t pull enough air for proper combustion. Signs include yellow-orange burner flames (should be blue), occasional pilot outages on older units, and high CO readings. Adding a combustion air intake resolves this; it’s a straightforward job for a licensed gas contractor.

🚨 Gas Emergency Protocol — Burlington

Smell of gas anywhere in the home:
Don’t operate any switch — leave immediately, go a distance from the home before using your phone, call Enbridge Gas Emergency Line: 1-877-362-7434
CO detector alarm:
Evacuate all people and pets, call 911 from outside the home, do not re-enter until emergency services clear the building
Boom on startup:
Shut off at the thermostat and the furnace power switch — do not restart; call for service before next use
Visible burn marks, cracks, or discolouration on the furnace:
Shut off gas at the shut-off valve and call for inspection before restarting

Frequently Asked Questions

My Burlington furnace turns on, runs for 2 minutes, then shuts off. What’s causing that?

That pattern — short run, shutdown, restart attempt, repeat — is almost always the high-limit safety switch responding to overheating caused by restricted airflow. The most common cause by far is a clogged furnace filter. Replace the filter first. If the cycle resumes normally, you’re done. If the problem persists after a fresh filter, the high-limit switch itself may have failed (stuck open or closed), the blower motor may be running below speed, or there may be a blockage elsewhere in the duct system. Those require a technician. The filter check costs nothing and takes two minutes; do it before anything else.

Open the lower access panel on your furnace. Inside you’ll find a sticker — the diagnostic code legend — that lists what each flash pattern means. The LED indicator is visible through a small viewing port on the panel exterior without removing anything. Count the flashes in one complete cycle (flashes, then a pause, then flashes again) — some codes use long flashes, some use short. Common Burlington furnace codes: 2 flashes often indicates a pressure switch fault (check condensate drain and intake pipe); 3 flashes typically means a draft pressure or pressure switch issue; 4 flashes commonly indicates a high-limit fault (check the filter); 7 flashes usually indicates an ignition lockout (flame sensor or gas issue). Take a slow-motion video of the LED before opening anything so you have an accurate count.

Not necessarily — this can have several explanations. First, check whether it’s simply a very cold Burlington day; if it’s -10°C to -15°C outside and your furnace is 15–20 years old, it may be running at the edge of its capacity. Second, check that all supply registers are fully open throughout the house — a couple of closed registers can unbalance distribution enough to leave some rooms cold while the furnace runs. Third, check the return air intake — if it’s blocked by furniture or debris, the furnace can’t pull enough air to distribute heat effectively. If none of these apply and the furnace is running but the home temperature keeps dropping, a low-refrigerant analogy applies here: the furnace may not be firing at all (fan only) or may have a cracked heat exchanger bypassing heat into the flue — both require a technician.

Still Not Fixed? We’re Available Now.

Burlington’s own HVAC team — 24/7 emergency furnace service, honest pricing, no surprises.
🚨 No Heat in Burlington?

(289) 812-7854

24/7 · Aldershot · Brant Hills · Headon · Tyandaga · Orchard
Gas Emergency Contacts
Gas smell or CO alarm?
Enbridge Gas Emergency:
1-877-362-7434
Fire / Emergency: 911
Leave the home before calling. Do not operate any switches.
Book Furnace Repair

Written estimate, honest diagnosis, no pressure on replacement. Same-day availability.