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Servicios de Reparación de electrodomésticos

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Appliance repair services keep the major systems of your home running — refrigerators, washers, dryers, dishwashers, ovens, and garbage disposals. A skilled technician can diagnose and fix most issues in a single visit, often for a fraction of replacement cost.

7
Servicios
En esta categoría
3
Países
US · PL · NL
Menos de 24h
Respuesta
Gratis
14
Problemas comunes
Diagnóstico

Cuándo llamar a un profesional

Common problems include refrigerators that won't cool, ice makers that stop producing, washers that won't drain or spin, dryers that run cold or won't tumble, dishwashers that leak or won't drain, and ovens with bad heating elements or igniters. Most repairs are simple — a worn belt, faulty switch, blocked drain, or stuck valve.

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The rule of thumb: if repair costs more than 50% of replacement cost and the appliance is past half its expected life, replace it. Most appliances last 10–15 years. Newer high-end models (Sub-Zero, Wolf, Miele) are usually worth repairing even at higher cost; entry-level models often aren't.

Resumen de precios

Service calls average $75–$150 and are typically credited toward the repair if you proceed. Common repair costs: refrigerator $200–$500, washer/dryer $150–$400, dishwasher $150–$350, oven $200–$450. Same-day or weekend service may carry a premium. Ask if the technician specializes in your brand — some brands (Bosch, LG, Samsung electronics-heavy models) need specialized diagnostic tools.

Rangos de referencia
$75–$150$200–$500$150–$400$150–$350
Servicios

Servicios en esta categoría

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Problemas comunes que resolvemos

Dryer Not Heating

A dryer that tumbles but produces no heat leaves clothes damp after a full cycle and forces repeated runs that waste energy. The most common causes are a blown thermal fuse, a faulty heating element, a defective gas igniter, or a clogged dryer vent restricting airflow. An appliance-repair technician tests the thermal fuse, heating element, thermostat, and igniter, replaces the failed part, and verifies the vent path is clear so the dryer reaches proper operating temperature again.

Fridge not cooling

A refrigerator that stops cooling properly can spoil food within hours. The issue may stem from a faulty thermostat, failed compressor, blocked condenser coils, or a broken evaporator fan. An appliance repair technician can diagnose the root cause and determine whether repair or replacement makes more sense.

Washer not draining

A washing machine that won't drain leaves clothes sitting in standing water and can create mold and odor problems. Common causes include a clogged pump filter, blocked drain hose, faulty drain pump, or a stuck coin or small object. An appliance repair technician can clear the blockage or replace the pump.

Dishwasher not cleaning properly

Dishes coming out of the dishwasher still dirty, filmy, or with food residue is a common frustration. The culprit is often a clogged spray arm, worn wash pump, faulty water inlet valve, or a broken heating element that prevents water from reaching the right temperature. An appliance tech can diagnose and fix the issue.

Dishwasher not draining

A dishwasher that leaves standing water at the bottom after every cycle is failing to drain properly, leaving dishes dirty and creating a breeding ground for odor-causing bacteria. The blockage usually sits in the drain pump, filter screen, or drain hose rather than in the household plumbing. An appliance-repair technician removes and cleans the filter assembly, checks the drain pump impeller for debris, inspects the hose and check valve for kinks or clogs, and runs a test cycle to confirm full drainage.

Dryer not heating

A clothes dryer that tumbles normally but produces no heat forces you to run multiple cycles, wasting energy and leaving laundry damp. The issue frequently traces to a blown thermal fuse, a burned-out heating element, a clogged lint vent restricting airflow, or a faulty cycling thermostat. An appliance-repair technician tests each thermal component with a multimeter, clears the vent path of lint buildup, replaces the failed part, and verifies the dryer reaches its target temperature within the first few minutes of a test cycle.

Washing machine leaking water

A washing machine that leaks water during fill, wash, or spin cycles can quickly damage flooring, promote mold growth, and create slip hazards. The cause is often a worn door gasket, cracked tub, loose hose clamp, or failing water inlet valve. An appliance repair technician can pinpoint the leak source, replace the faulty part, and verify the machine runs a full cycle without dripping.

Refrigerator not cooling properly

When a refrigerator stops maintaining temperature, food spoils quickly and the compressor often runs continuously trying to compensate. Common culprits include dirty condenser coils, a failed evaporator fan, a malfunctioning defrost system causing ice buildup on the evaporator, or a refrigerant leak. An appliance repair technician can diagnose whether the problem is mechanical, electrical, or a sealed-system issue and replace the failed component before the food loss adds up.

Dishwasher door not latching

When a dishwasher door won't latch, the machine won't start — most models have a door switch safety interlock that prevents operation with the door open. Common causes include a worn or broken door latch assembly, a misaligned strike plate, or a faulty door switch. An appliance repair technician can diagnose whether the issue is mechanical (latch/hinge) or electrical (door switch) and replace the failed part.

Dryer taking too long to dry clothes

When a dryer runs a full cycle but clothes come out still damp, the problem is almost always restricted airflow or a failing heat source. The most common culprit is a clogged vent duct: lint builds up beyond the lint trap — inside the duct, at the elbow, or at the exterior flap — and chokes exhaust flow. This is also a fire hazard: clogged dryer vents cause an estimated 2,900 house fires per year in the U.S. A kinked or crushed flexible duct behind the dryer has the same effect. On the mechanical side, a burned-out heating element (electric) or a faulty gas igniter/flame sensor (gas) means the drum tumbles but never reaches drying temperature. Worn felt drum seals can leak hot air out of the drum before it passes through the clothes. Overloading the drum is the simplest cause — too many items block airflow inside the drum. An appliance technician checks vent airflow at the exterior outlet, inspects the heating element or gas igniter, tests the thermal fuse and cycling thermostat, and examines drum seals. A vent-cleaning specialist snakes the full duct run and clears any blockage.

Microwave not heating

A microwave that runs but doesn't heat food usually has a failed magnetron, defective diode, or blown high-voltage capacitor. These components carry lethal voltage even when the unit is unplugged, so repairs require a trained appliance technician. A pro can diagnose the fault, replace the magnetron or diode, and test for safe operation — or advise replacement if the repair cost exceeds the unit's value.

Washing machine shaking violently

A washing machine that shakes, walks across the floor, or bangs during the spin cycle is more than a nuisance — it can damage flooring, loosen water connections, and shorten the machine's lifespan. Common causes include worn shock absorbers or suspension springs, an unbalanced drum, failed tub bearings, or simply uneven leveling. An appliance repair technician can diagnose the root cause, replace worn dampeners or bearings, and re-level the unit so it runs quietly.

Refrigerator ice maker not working

An ice maker that stops producing ice is one of the most common refrigerator complaints. The cause is usually a frozen fill tube, a faulty water inlet valve, a stuck ejector arm, a failed ice-maker module, or insufficient water pressure from the household supply. An appliance repair technician tests the water supply line, checks the fill-tube heater, inspects the mold thermostat, and replaces the specific part that failed — getting ice production back within a single service call in most cases.

Washing machine shaking violently during spin

A washing machine that shakes, walks across the floor, or bangs loudly during the spin cycle is more than a nuisance — it can damage flooring, loosen plumbing connections, and wear out internal bearings and the drum spider prematurely. Common causes include worn shock absorbers or suspension springs, an unbalanced load sensor failure, broken counterweights, or leveling legs that have shifted. An appliance-repair technician levels the machine, inspects suspension components, replaces worn shocks or springs, and checks the drum bearings to restore smooth, quiet operation.

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Preguntas frecuentes

Preguntas frecuentes

  • What appliances do you cover?
    We connect you with local technicians for refrigerators, washers, dryers, dishwashers, ovens and stoves, and garbage disposals. Many also handle microwaves, freezers, ice makers, and built-in coffee machines — ask when booking.
  • Should I repair or replace?
    Use the 50% rule: if repair costs more than half the price of a comparable new unit and your appliance is past half its expected life (10–15 years for most), replace it. Higher-end brands (Sub-Zero, Wolf, Miele, Viking) are usually worth repairing even when costly.
  • How much does an appliance repair cost?
    Service call: $75–$150 (usually credited toward the repair). Refrigerator repair: $200–$500. Washer/dryer: $150–$400. Dishwasher: $150–$350. Oven/stove: $200–$450. Garbage disposal: $100–$250.
  • How long does a repair take?
    Most repairs are completed in a single visit of 1–2 hours. Repairs needing special-order parts can take 5–10 days to complete. Newer electronic-heavy models sometimes need return visits if the first diagnosis is wrong — ask your tech about their first-visit completion rate.