Where Is the Carburetor on a Lawn Mower? (Push, Riding and by Brand)
In This Guide
- What a Lawn Mower Carburetor Looks Like
- Where the Carburetor Is on a Push Mower
- Where the Carburetor Is on a Riding Mower
- Zero Turn and Self Propelled Mowers
- Carburetor Location by Engine Brand
- How to Find It in 60 Seconds (Any Mower)
- Why You Are Probably Looking for It
- Clean It Yourself or Call a Technician?
- Frequently Asked Questions
If your mower will not start, surges while running, or dies the moment you release the primer, the carburetor is the first suspect, and the first thing every owner asks is the same question: where is it? After more than 10,000 small engine repairs completed at customer homes since 2019, our technicians can answer it for virtually every mower sold in America. This guide shows you the exact carburetor location on push mowers, riding mowers and zero turns, then breaks it down by the engine brands that actually power them: Briggs & Stratton, Honda, Kohler and Kawasaki.
What a Lawn Mower Carburetor Looks Like
A lawn mower carburetor is a fist sized metal component, usually silver, gray or black aluminum, roughly rectangular with a round air opening on one face. It always sits between two landmarks you can find easily: the air filter on one side and the engine block on the other, with the fuel line from the gas tank feeding into it. The diagram below shows the layout that nearly every gas mower follows.
Three visual clues confirm you have found it:
- The fuel line runs into it. A rubber hose about the width of a pencil leaves the gas tank and connects to the carburetor with a small clamp.
- A bowl hangs underneath most of them. Float style carburetors, which power the majority of mowers, have a small metal cup on the bottom held by a single nut. That float bowl is where stale fuel varnish collects first.
- Linkage and small springs attach to it. Thin metal rods connect the carburetor to the throttle and choke. If you see delicate springs and levers, you are in the right place.
The carburetor's job is to mix air and gasoline in the exact ratio the engine needs to fire, adjusting as load and speed change. When old fuel gums up its tiny passages, the ratio drifts and the engine stumbles, which is why recognizing the signs your carburetor needs cleaning is the natural next step after finding it.
Where the Carburetor Is on a Push Mower
On a push or walk behind mower, the carburetor is mounted on the side of the engine, directly behind the air filter housing, a few inches above the deck. Stand behind the mower as if you were about to mow. On most models the air filter housing, a black plastic box about the size of a paperback book, sits on the right side of the engine. The carburetor is bolted to the engine immediately behind that box, sandwiched between the filter and the engine block, exactly as the diagram above shows.
To see it, remove the air filter cover, which is held by one or two screws or simple snap clips, lift out the foam or paper filter, and then remove the filter base plate. The metal component now exposed, with the fuel line entering one side, is the carburetor.
One layout exception worth knowing: on some older or budget push mowers, the gas tank and carburetor are built as one assembly mounted on top of the engine, with the carburetor bolted directly beneath the tank. If you cannot find a side mounted air filter box, look under the fuel tank.
Where the Carburetor Is on a Riding Mower
On riding mowers and lawn tractors, the carburetor keeps the same relationship to the engine, behind the air intake, but the engine itself is hidden. Open the hood on a tractor style rider and look at the engine from the front. The air filter housing is the large plastic assembly on the upper side of the engine, and the carburetor sits directly behind or beneath it, connected by the rubber intake duct.
Access order is the same on nearly every model: remove the air filter cover, the filter element, and the filter housing base, usually two to four bolts, and the carburetor is exposed with its fuel line, float bowl and linkage visible. On some single cylinder engines you will also need to unclip a breather tube from the housing before it lifts away.
Zero Turn and Self Propelled Mowers
Zero turn mowers carry the engine behind the seat rather than under a hood. Lift or remove the seat panel, or open the rear engine cover, and you are looking at the top of a V twin engine on most residential and commercial zero turns. The air filter is the prominent canister or square housing on top, and the carburetor is mounted beneath it, between the two cylinder banks. Space is tighter than on a tractor, which is one reason zero turn carburetor work costs more at every shop in the country, ours included.
Self propelled mowers are walk behinds with a drive system added, so the carburetor location matches the push mower description above: side of the engine, behind the air filter, above the deck. The drive components live near the wheels and do not change where the engine breathes.
Carburetor Location by Engine Brand
Here is the detail most guides skip. The brand on your mower's deck, whether Toro, Craftsman, Cub Cadet, Troy-Bilt, Husqvarna or John Deere, usually did not build the engine. A handful of engine manufacturers power almost every gas mower sold, and the engine brand is what determines exactly where the carburetor sits. Check the valve cover or blower housing for the engine maker's name, then use this table.
| Engine Brand | Commonly Found On | Carburetor Location | Access Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Briggs & Stratton | Toro, Craftsman, Troy-Bilt, Husqvarna, Murray, Snapper push and riding mowers | Side of the engine block, directly behind the air filter | Most filter covers use one screw or snap tabs. On Classic and Sprint series, the carb bolts under the fuel tank instead. |
| Honda GCV / GXV | Honda HRX, HRN and HRC mowers, many premium walk behinds | Left side of the engine behind the air cleaner, beneath the fuel tank | The air cleaner cover unclips without tools on GCV engines. The carb sits close to the tank, so watch for fuel drips. |
| Kohler | Cub Cadet, Husqvarna, John Deere and Craftsman riding mowers and zero turns | Under or behind the air intake, between cylinders on V twin models | Remove the filter housing base, usually four bolts, plus the breather tube. Hood removal gives easier access on tractors. |
| Kawasaki | Commercial zero turns and high end riders from Gravely, Ferris, Bad Boy and Toro | Center of the V, beneath the canister style air filter | Tight clearance behind the seat. Photograph the linkage before disconnecting anything. |
| Tecumseh (older units) | Older MTD, Yard Machines and White Outdoor equipment | Side mounted behind a square filter box, often under the tank on vertical pull models | Aged fuel lines on these engines crack easily. Inspect the line while you are in there. |
How to Find It in 60 Seconds (Any Mower)
If you remember nothing else from this guide, remember this sequence. It locates the carburetor on any gas mower ever made:
Kill the engine, pull the plug wire
Shut down, let the engine cool, and disconnect the spark plug wire. Safety is step one, not step five.
Find the gas tank
It is the part you fill, so you already know where it is on your machine.
Follow the black fuel line
Trace the rubber line leaving the tank. It sometimes passes through a small barrel shaped inline fuel filter.
The line ends at the carburetor
Confirm with the visual checks above: float bowl underneath, linkage on top, air filter on the other side.
Why You Are Probably Looking for It
Nobody looks up carburetor locations for fun. Across tens of thousands of service calls, the search almost always starts with one of these symptoms:
- The mower will not start after winter storage. Fuel left in the carburetor evaporates into a sticky varnish that blocks the jets. This is the single most common repair we perform every spring, and our spring tune up guide explains how to prevent it entirely.
- It starts on choke but dies on run. A classic partially clogged main jet.
- It surges, hunting up and down in rpm. The idle circuit is starving for fuel.
- Black smoke or fuel dripping from the air filter. The float valve is stuck and the carburetor is flooding.
- It only runs while you keep pressing the primer bulb. Fuel delivery through the carb has failed almost completely.
Every one of those traces back to the same fist sized component you just located. The question is what to do next, and our guide on how to tell if your carburetor needs cleaning walks through the diagnosis in detail.
Clean It Yourself or Call a Technician?
A surface clean, spraying carburetor cleaner through the intake and into the bowl drain with the filter off, is genuinely DIY friendly and fixes light varnish. A full service is a different job: the carburetor comes off the engine, the bowl, float, needle and jets are disassembled, soaked and cleared with compressed air, gaskets are replaced, and the linkage is reset. Lose one spring clip or tear one gasket and the mower runs worse than when you started. Modern EPA era carburetors also have no adjustment screws, so a unit that is worn rather than dirty needs replacement, not tuning.
For reference, here is exactly what we charge to do it at your home, with the mower never leaving your driveway:
| Carburetor Cleaning Service | Mobile Price | Typical Time |
|---|---|---|
| Push / walk behind mower | $115 | About 1 hour |
| Snow blower | $140 | About 1 hour |
| Riding mower | $175 | 1 to 1.5 hours |
| Zero turn mower | $275 | 1.5 to 2 hours |
Those are flat published rates, not hourly meters, and they include removal, full disassembly, cleaning and reassembly by a technician at your home. If the carburetor turns out to be beyond cleaning, you approve any replacement cost before a wrench turns. You can see everything else we service on our mobile lawn mower repair page, and maintenance schedules that prevent carb trouble in the first place live in our lawn mower maintenance guide.
Found the Carburetor but Not the Problem?
A Wildwood technician can diagnose and fix it in your driveway, usually in about an hour. More than 10,000 repairs completed since 2019, with flat rates published before we arrive.
