Repair Guide

Lawn Mower Engine Surging: Why Your Mower Revs Up and Down

By Wildwood Repair Team Reviewed by a certified technician Updated June 24, 2026 7 min read
Quick Answer
Lawn mower surging, the engine rhythmically revving up and down on its own, is caused by an inconsistent fuel supply, and the rhythm you hear is the governor chasing it. The engine leans out and slows, the governor opens the throttle, rpm recovers, then it leans out again. The top causes in order: partially clogged carburetor jets from old fuel, stale gas, a blocked gas cap vent, and air leaks at the carburetor gaskets. Cleaning the carburetor cures most surging.

Surging has a sound every mower owner recognizes: vroom, droop, vroom, droop, the engine hunting up and down in a steady rhythm with your hands nowhere near the throttle. Technicians call it hunting, and unlike most engine noises it has an almost mechanical explanation that makes the fix logical. Across thousands of driveway repairs, the cure is the same in the large majority of cases, and this guide explains the why before the fix, because understanding the governor makes the whole symptom click.

What Surging Is and What the Sound Means

Surging is the engine repeatedly speeding up and slowing down at a fixed throttle setting, usually in a one to three second rhythm. It is most obvious at idle or no load, sometimes smoothing out when the blades engage and load the engine. The critical insight is that the surge rhythm is not random misfiring: it is a feedback loop, your mower's speed control system fighting a fuel problem and losing on repeat.

The Governor: Why the Revving Has a Rhythm

Every mower engine has a governor, a mechanical or air vane system whose only job is holding rpm steady as load changes. When you set the throttle, you are really setting a target speed, and the governor continuously trims the actual throttle plate to hold it.

Now starve the engine slightly. A lean mixture makes power fall, rpm droops, and the governor responds exactly as designed: it opens the throttle. The extra airflow briefly pulls enough fuel to recover, rpm rises past target, the governor closes the throttle, fuel delivery falls short again, and the cycle repeats forever. That is the surge: a healthy governor faithfully chasing an unhealthy fuel supply. It also explains the cardinal rule of surge repair: do not bend or adjust the governor linkage. The governor is the messenger, not the problem, and misadjusting it risks a dangerous overspeed.

Important: never bend governor arms or stretch governor springs to silence a surge. Governor tampering can let a small engine overspeed far beyond its rated rpm, which can be destructive and genuinely dangerous.

Cause 1: Partially Clogged Carburetor Jets

The number one cause of surging is the same villain behind most small engine complaints: fuel varnish narrowing the carburetor jets. A fully blocked jet stops the engine, but a partially blocked one creates precisely the marginal, almost enough fuel supply that the governor loop turns into a surge. Idle circuit blockages produce surging at idle, main jet restrictions produce it at running speed.

The confirmation test takes ten seconds: ease the choke partway on while the engine surges. If the surge smooths out, you have proven the engine is running lean and the carburetor needs cleaning. Find it with our carburetor location guide, confirm with the cleaning signs checklist, and if you would rather not do surgery on jets, our technicians clean carburetors at your home for a flat $115 on push mowers.

Cause 2: Stale Fuel and Tank Vent Problems

Two fuel supply causes mimic a dirty carburetor closely. Degraded gasoline burns inconsistently enough to create lean stumbles the governor then amplifies into a surge, and the fix is simply draining and refilling with fresh fuel. A blocked gas cap vent creates a slowly building vacuum that throttles fuel flow, producing a surge that worsens with run time and often ends in a stall. Run the mower with the cap loosened a half turn: if the surge disappears, replace the cap. Both checks cost nothing and take five minutes, which is why they come before carburetor removal in our diagnostic order.

Cause 3: Air Leaks at Gaskets and Mounting Flanges

A lean mixture can come from extra air just as easily as missing fuel. The gaskets between the carburetor and the engine, and on some engines an O ring or rubber intake boot, dry out and crack with age and heat. The leak admits unmetered air, leans the mixture, and produces a surge that often changes pitch when the engine warms up or when you press lightly on the carburetor body.

The technician test is careful and brief: with the engine surging, a small spray of carburetor cleaner around the mounting flange will momentarily smooth or change the engine note if a leak is present, because the engine briefly burns the spray as enrichment. Gaskets cost a few dollars; the labor is in the careful disassembly and the linkage reassembly.

Less Common Causes Worth Knowing

When the big three come up clean, the remaining suspects are: a pinched or cracking fuel line restricting flow (inspect the full run, especially at clamps), a clogged fuel filter on models that have one, a dirty air filter rich enough to confuse the mixture, water in the fuel producing irregular stumbles rather than a clean rhythm, and on older machines, worn governor components, the one case where the governor itself is at fault, best diagnosed by a technician rather than adjusted by guesswork.

The Fix List in Order, and What It Costs

Run the cheap checks first, in this exact order:

  1. Fresh fuel in, old fuel out (free).
  2. Loosen the gas cap test (free).
  3. Air filter inspection (a few dollars if dirty).
  4. The choke test to confirm a lean condition (free).
  5. Carburetor cleaning, DIY with a kit or done at your driveway for a flat $115 on push mowers and $175 on riders.
  6. Carburetor mounting gaskets if the leak test spoke up.

Most surging dies at step five. If yours survives all six, the remaining causes involve fuel line replacement, governor inspection or carburetor replacement, all of which a Wildwood technician handles in a single home visit with the price approved up front. Booking is on our lawn mower repair page, and if your surge is paired with stalling, read our companion guide on a mower that starts then dies, because the two share a root cause more often than not.

Make the Rev Rollercoaster Stop.

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.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a lawnmower engine surge?
Surging is caused by an inconsistent fuel supply, most often carburetor jets partially clogged with fuel varnish, combined with the governor doing its job. The engine leans out and slows, the governor opens the throttle, rpm recovers and the cycle repeats, producing the rhythmic rev.
Why does my lawn mower idle up and down?
Idle surging points at a restricted idle circuit in the carburetor or an air leak at the carburetor gaskets. The idle circuit passages are the smallest in the carburetor, so they clog first when fuel ages in the bowl.
Why is my lawn mower hunting?
Hunting is the technician term for surging: the governor hunting for a stable speed it cannot hold because fuel delivery keeps falling short. The usual cause is a partially clogged carburetor, with stale fuel, a blocked tank vent and gasket air leaks behind it.
Why does my lawn mower rev up and down at full throttle?
At full throttle the main jet feeds the engine, so surging at speed points to a partially blocked main jet or a fuel supply restriction such as a failing fuel line, clogged filter or blocked gas cap vent. If easing the choke on smooths it, the lean condition is confirmed.
Why does a small engine surge only with no load?
Light load magnifies the governor feedback loop because tiny mixture errors swing rpm more when the engine has nothing to push against. Many engines smooth out under blade load while still having a mildly restricted carburetor that deserves cleaning.
Can I fix surging by adjusting the governor?
No, and you should not try. The governor is responding correctly to a fuel problem, and bending its linkage or stretching its spring can allow a dangerous engine overspeed. Fix the fuel delivery and the governor will hold speed steadily again.
Will fuel additives cure a surging mower?
Cleaner additives occasionally help marginal varnish if the engine still runs enough to circulate them, but a jet restricted enough to cause steady surging usually needs physical cleaning. Additives are better as prevention than cure.
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About the Author

Wildwood Repair Team

The Wildwood Small Engine Repair team has completed more than 10,000 mobile repairs on lawn mowers, snow blowers, generators and outdoor power equipment since 2019. Every guide is written from real bench experience and reviewed by a certified small engine technician before publishing.