The gas control valve is the brain of a gas tank water heater. It regulates gas flow to the main burner based on the thermostat's temperature reading, manages the pilot supply, and holds the safety interlock with the thermocouple. It's also one of the most expensive Rheem replacement parts ($180–$320 depending on BTU class). When it fails, the question isn't how to replace it — it's whether to.
Symptoms of gas valve failure
Common gas valve failure patterns on Rheem:
- Pilot lights and stays lit, but main burner never fires — the thermostat is calling for heat but the gas valve isn't opening the main supply
- Main burner fires but cycles unpredictably — internal thermostat sensor in the gas valve has failed
- Pilot won't stay lit even with a new thermocouple and good pilot assembly — the gas valve's safety magnet has weakened
- Water gets very hot regardless of thermostat setting — gas valve stuck open
- Water never gets hot enough — gas valve modulating too low
- Gas smell at the valve body — internal seal failure, immediate replacement required
Rheem gas valve part numbers
| Tank BTU class | Rheem part # | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard 32K–40K BTU (40G/50G atmospheric) | SP21176A | $180–$280 |
| High-recovery 76K BTU (75G/80G atmospheric) | SP21176B | $220–$320 |
| Power-vent (40K BTU) | SP21176D | $200–$300 |
| Condensing Performance Platinum | SP21176E (electronic) | $300–$450 |
Always verify the exact part number against your unit's data plate. Aftermarket "universal" gas valves exist but Rheem strongly advises against them — gas valves are safety-critical and even small flow-rate differences can cause incomplete combustion (carbon monoxide risk).
The repair-vs-replace decision
Gas valve replacement on a Rheem residential tank water heater:
- Part cost: $180–$320
- Labor cost: $200–$400 (gas-certified plumber; not DIY)
- Total repair: $380–$720
Compare to a new mid-tier 50G Rheem (Performance Plus or Professional Classic Plus): $850–$1,099 + $400–$700 install = $1,250–$1,800 turnkey.
Decision rule by tank age:
| Tank age | Action | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Under 5 years | Replace the gas valve | Tank has 7+ years of life remaining — repair pays back fast |
| 5–8 years | Replace the gas valve if other components look good | Borderline; check anode rod condition and tank shell integrity first |
| 8–10 years | Consider full replacement | Tank shell is approaching end of life; gas valve repair may be money sunk into a unit that fails in 2 years anyway |
| 10+ years | Replace the entire unit | Almost always — repairing a 12-year-old tank to extend it 2 more years is poor economics |
Why DIY isn't recommended
Gas valve replacement involves: disconnecting the main gas supply, removing the manifold from the valve, removing the thermostat sensor (sometimes integral to the valve), reconnecting and pressure-testing every joint. A leak after install creates explosion/asphyxiation risk. Gas-certified plumbers do this work daily; even handy homeowners should not.
For DIY-friendly parts see our anode rod page, element page, and thermocouple page — those are safe DIY territory.
Warranty considerations
Rheem covers the gas valve under the parts warranty (6/8/9/12 years depending on tier). Before paying for a replacement, check warranty status. If under warranty, Rheem ships the part and you only pay labor — total cost drops to $200–$400.
Bottom line
Rheem gas valves cost $180–$320, take a gas-certified plumber to replace, and total repair runs $380–$720. Worth it on tanks under 8 years old; questionable past that. Check warranty status first — covered replacement drops cost dramatically. For full parts directory see our Rheem parts hub.