How to Fix an Instant Pot That Won’t Pressurize
Your Instant Pot is running but never builds pressure — and your food isn’t cooking.
This is one of the most common Instant Pot problems and almost always comes down to one of four simple things. None of them require any tools and none of them cost much — if anything at all.
Find your situation in the table below and jump straight to the right fix.
Never try to force the lid open while the Instant Pot is pressurized. Always make sure the float valve (the small silver pin on the lid) has dropped completely down before opening. If it’s still up, the pot still has pressure inside.
| What you see | What it means | Go to |
|---|---|---|
| Steam leaking from the sides of the lid | Sealing ring missing, dirty, or damaged | Fix 1 → |
| Steam blowing out the top vent constantly | Pressure release valve is in wrong position | Fix 2 → |
| Pot counts up forever, never reaches pressure | Not enough liquid inside the pot | Fix 3 → |
| Lid won’t lock or sits crooked | Lid is not aligned and seated correctly | Fix 4 → |
Steam Leaking from the Sides of the Lid
💰 Free — or under $10 if ring needs replacingInside the lid sits a rubber sealing ring. It creates an airtight seal so pressure can build. If that ring is missing, seated wrong, stretched out, cracked, or caked with food residue — steam escapes around the edges and the pot never pressurizes. This is the number one cause of Instant Pot pressure problems.
Buy a second sealing ring and use one for savory meals and one for sweet — the rubber absorbs odors over time and a curry-scented ring can flavor your cheesecake.
Steam Blowing Out the Top Vent Constantly
💰 Free — just a setting adjustmentOn top of the lid is a small valve called the pressure release valve — sometimes labeled “Venting” and “Sealing.” If it’s turned to Venting, steam escapes on purpose and the pot never builds pressure. It’s easy to bump it without realizing. New Instant Pot users miss this one all the time.
Every single time you lock the lid, look at that valve first. Make it a routine — lid on, check the valve, then start cooking. Takes two seconds and saves a lot of frustration.
Pot Counts Up Forever and Never Reaches Pressure
💰 Free — no parts neededThe Instant Pot builds pressure using steam from liquid inside the pot. If there isn’t enough liquid, there isn’t enough steam, and the pot just keeps heating up without ever pressurizing. Too much thick food — like tomato paste or mashed potato — can also block steam from forming properly.
When in doubt, add a cup of water. Extra liquid won’t ruin most recipes — it just makes a little more sauce or broth at the end.
Lid Won’t Lock or Sits Crooked
💰 Free — alignment issueThe Instant Pot lid has a locking mechanism that only engages when the lid is placed at the correct starting position and turned the right way. If the lid is slightly off-center or turned the wrong direction, it won’t lock — and a lid that isn’t fully locked can’t hold pressure.
After locking the lid, always look for the float valve pin on top — it should be free to move up and down. If it’s stuck or blocked by food debris, clean it with a toothpick before cooking.
🤔 Still Not Pressurizing After All Four Fixes?
If you’ve worked through all four fixes and the pot still won’t pressurize, the float valve itself may be stuck or the pressure sensor inside the pot may have failed. Both are rare but they do happen on older machines.
Before you buy a new one: Instant Pot’s customer support line is 1-800-828-7280. Their warranty covers manufacturing defects and they’re known for good customer service. If your pot is under the warranty period — typically one year — they may replace it for free. Worth a quick call.
Did This Guide Save Your Instant Pot?
I write every guide myself so people don’t throw away perfectly fixable machines. If this helped you today, a coffee means a lot.