Appliance repair cost guide · 2026

How much does appliance repair cost?

Most residential appliance repairs run $100–$650 all-in with parts and labor, and a single-appliance service call typically lands at $171–$250 in 2026. Simple fixes sit near $100–$200; mid-range repairs $200–$450; major sealed-system or structural work pushes $500–$1,250+. Where your job lands depends mostly on the appliance, the scope, and your local labor market.

Ranges reflect typical U.S. residential pricing as of 2026 · Vary by region, appliance, and parts — confirm against a local quote

Appliance repair pricing at a glance

Verified 2026 all-in ranges for common residential repairs — each bundles the diagnostic and labor. Appliance type, parts origin, brand, and your metro move every line.

RepairTypical all-in rangeWhat moves it
Diagnostic / service call fee$50–$100Often waived/credited if repair is approved
Dryer belt replacement$100–$200Access, brand part availability
Dryer heating element$150–$300Electric vs gas, part cost
Washer pump or lid switch$150–$250Part rating, top- vs front-load
Washing machine control board$200–$400Smart/connected boards run higher
Dishwasher pump or spray arm$150–$300Brand, parts availability
Refrigerator ice maker$150–$350OEM vs aftermarket, brand
Refrigerator compressor (sealed system)$700–$1,250+Welding + refrigerant recharge, tariffs
Oven element / gas igniter$150–$300Electric element vs gas igniter
Glass cooktop replacement$400–$600+Glass alone $150–$350 + labor
After-hours / weekend+$50–$110Holidays 50–100% premium

Bands are verified 2026 national averages for residential work and will differ in your area. Always confirm against a local quote, the specific brand, and the part needed.

Most residential appliance repairs run $100 to $650 all-in with parts and labor as of 2026, and the most-cited average for a single-appliance service call is $171 to $250. But "appliance repair" covers everything from a $120 dryer belt to a $1,250-plus refrigerator compressor, so the only honest answer starts with a range and then explains what pushes you to one end of it. Here is where the number actually comes from.

The national range — and why it's a range

Across six pricing sources published in 2025 and 2026, residential appliance repair clusters like this:

  • Simple fixes — $100 to $200. A belt, a fuse, a switch, a door seal. One part, fast labor, common availability.
  • Mid-range repairs — $200 to $450. A pump, a motor, a heating element, or a control board. More part cost, more labor, sometimes a special order.
  • Major sealed-system or structural work — $500 to $1,250-plus. A refrigerator compressor, a washer drum, a double-oven element, a glass cooktop. Complex labor, expensive parts, sometimes welding and a refrigerant recharge.

The reason a single flat number misleads is that the spread between those tiers is driven by the appliance and the scope — not by rounding error. A repair shop quoting a real job has to know the appliance, the failed component, and the brand before the number means anything. Anyone quoting "$347 flat" before they know what broke is guessing.

What moves your quote

Seven drivers explain almost the entire range. In rough order of impact:

  • Appliance type and complexity. Refrigerators and sealed-system appliances — compressors, refrigerant lines — cost significantly more than dryers or garbage disposals. This is the single biggest swing.
  • Repair scope. A one-part swap (belt, fuse) versus multi-component or sealed-system work (compressor, welding plus a refrigerant recharge) is the largest cost-spread driver within any one appliance.
  • Labor market / metro area. Technician rates run from about $50/hr in low-cost rural markets to $125–$175/hr in high-cost metros like New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco.
  • Parts origin and tariffs. 2025–2026 tariffs on China and Mexico imports raised compressor, circuit board, and motor costs 5–20%. OEM parts already cost 30–50% more than aftermarket equivalents.
  • Brand and parts availability. Common brands (Whirlpool, GE) have cheaper, faster parts; premium or imported brands (Miele, Viking, Bosch) carry parts premiums of 30–80%.
  • Appliance age and fuel type. Parts for units 10-plus years old are scarce and expensive, sometimes special-order or refurbished. Gas appliance repairs average about 20% more than equivalent electric repairs because of gas-line and safety-certification requirements.
  • Urgency and scheduling. After-hours, weekend, and holiday service adds $50–$110 above standard rates, with holiday premiums of 50–100%. Peak demand seasons push prices up 10–15%.

One newer driver worth flagging: smart, Wi-Fi-connected appliances report 87 problems per 100 units versus 63 for standard units, and their control-board failures are both more frequent and more expensive — boards run $80 to $840 depending on brand.

What it costs to fix specific appliances

These are verified 2026 all-in bands that include the diagnostic and labor.

Dryers

  • Belt replacement: $100–$200 — the most common dryer fix.
  • Heating element: $150–$300.
  • Thermal fuse: $75–$150.

Washers

  • Pump or lid switch: $150–$250.
  • Drum bearing or motor: $200–$400.
  • Control board: $200–$400 — higher on connected models.

Dishwashers

  • Pump or spray arm: $150–$300.
  • Door latch or heating element: $100–$200.

Refrigerators

  • Thermostat or defrost timer: $150–$250.
  • Evaporator or condenser fan motor: $200–$400.
  • Ice maker: $150–$350.
  • Control board: $200–$840 depending on brand.
  • Compressor (sealed system, includes welding + refrigerant recharge): $700–$1,250+ — the most expensive common appliance repair.

Ovens, ranges, and cooktops

  • Electric heating element: $150–$300.
  • Gas igniter: $150–$250.
  • Control board or thermostat: $200–$400.
  • Glass cooktop replacement: $400–$600+ — the glass alone is $150–$350 plus labor.

Microwaves and disposals

  • Microwave magnetron or door switch: $150–$300.
  • Garbage disposal repair: $100–$250; a full replacement runs $150–$350.

On top of any of these, expect a diagnostic or service-call fee of $50–$100 (refrigerator diagnostics are sometimes $99), often waived or credited toward the repair if you approve the work. Rural or distance jobs may add a $25–$100 travel charge.

When it costs more — and when it costs less

Two homes with the same broken appliance can get very different quotes. You'll pay more when:

  • The appliance is a refrigerator or another sealed-system unit, especially a compressor job.
  • You own a premium or imported brand (Miele, Viking, Bosch) — parts premiums of 30–80% are normal.
  • The unit is gas (about 20% over electric) or 10-plus years old (scarce, special-order parts).
  • You need after-hours, weekend, or holiday service, or you're calling during peak season.
  • You live in a high-cost metro where technician labor runs $125–$175/hr.

You'll pay less when:

  • It's a single-part swap — belt, fuse, switch, seal — on a dryer, disposal, or other simple appliance.
  • You own a common brand (Whirlpool, GE) with cheap, in-stock parts.
  • You accept an aftermarket part instead of OEM (30–50% cheaper).
  • You can schedule during standard hours and a normal season.
  • You're in a lower-cost market where labor runs $50–$75/hr.

Regional and market differences

Regional labor differences are the single largest driver of geographic spread; parts costs are largely national except where supply-chain delays add shipping premiums in remote markets. As of 2026:

  • High-cost metros (New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco): all-in service calls average $300–$500+, with labor at $100–$175/hr. NYC-area averages are cited at $314–$327 per job; LA at around $300, with a $180–$500 range.
  • Mid-tier metros (Chicago, Atlanta, Dallas): $200–$350 typical. Chicago independent contractors run $80–$115/hr.
  • Sun Belt and Midwest (Oklahoma City, Jacksonville, mid-size Midwest cities): $150–$280 typical; Florida shops cite $150–$300 for most single-appliance jobs.
  • Rural markets: labor can drop to $40–$75/hr, but technician availability is limited and travel fees of $25–$100 offset some of the savings.

One climate note: coastal and high-humidity regions — Florida, the Gulf Coast, the Southeast — see accelerated corrosion that degrades appliances one to three years faster than the national average, which raises both repair frequency and complexity over a unit's life.

Repair or replace?

The working rule most technicians use: repair when the fix costs less than half the price of a comparable new unit, and lean toward replacement when it approaches or exceeds that. A $150 dryer belt or a $200 washer pump is almost always worth fixing. A $700–$1,250-plus refrigerator compressor on a unit that's 10 or more years old is the classic replace candidate — older-appliance parts are scarce and expensive, and the rest of the machine is near the end of its life anyway. Age, brand, and any recent prior failures all weigh into the call.

How shops quote and collect appliance repair

Once you've set fair prices, the job is still to quote them cleanly, get a yes, and collect — ideally before the truck leaves. Claver for appliance repair lets you build a flat-rate pricebook for common jobs, send a clear quote from the customer's kitchen, take a deposit on a special-order part, and invoice and collect by card or ACH on the spot. Customers can even book online and pay through financing on larger jobs. Claver starts at $19/mo flat, month-to-month. See how it fits on the appliance repair page, or browse more pricing breakdowns in the guides hub.

Appliance repair cost — FAQ

How much does appliance repair cost?
Most residential appliance repairs run $100 to $650 all-in, including parts and labor, as of 2026. The most-cited average for a single-appliance service call is $171 to $250. Simple fixes like a belt, fuse, switch, or seal land at the low end ($100 to $200); mid-range repairs like a pump, motor, heating element, or control board run $200 to $450; and major sealed-system or structural work like a compressor, drum, or glass cooktop pushes $500 to $1,250 or more. Where your job lands depends mostly on the appliance type, the scope of the repair, and your local labor market.
Why is appliance repair more expensive in 2026?
2025 to 2026 tariffs on imports from China and Mexico raised the cost of compressors, circuit boards, and motors by roughly 5 to 20 percent, and those increases flow straight to the invoice. OEM parts already cost 30 to 50 percent more than aftermarket equivalents, and premium or imported brands like Miele, Viking, and Bosch carry parts premiums of 30 to 80 percent. Smart, Wi-Fi-connected appliances also fail more often than standard units, and their control boards are expensive to replace ($80 to $840). Add normal labor-rate inflation in high-cost metros and the typical repair costs more than it did a few years ago.
Is it cheaper to repair or replace an appliance?
The common rule of thumb is to repair when the fix costs less than half the price of a comparable new unit, and to replace when the repair approaches or exceeds that. A $150 dryer belt or a $200 washer pump is almost always worth repairing. A $700 to $1,250-plus refrigerator compressor on a unit that is 10 or more years old is the classic replace candidate, because parts for older appliances are scarce and expensive and the rest of the machine is near the end of its life. Age, brand, and whether the appliance has had other recent failures all factor in.
What does it cost to fix specific appliances?
As rough 2026 all-in bands that vary by market and parts: a dryer belt runs $100 to $200 and a dryer heating element $150 to $300; a washer pump or lid switch is $150 to $250 and a washer control board $200 to $400; a dishwasher pump or spray arm is $150 to $300; a refrigerator ice maker is $150 to $350, an evaporator or condenser fan motor $200 to $400, and a sealed-system compressor $700 to $1,250-plus; an electric oven element is $150 to $300 and a gas igniter $150 to $250; and a glass cooktop replacement runs $400 to $600 or more. Each includes the diagnostic and labor.
What drives the price of an appliance repair?
The biggest factors are the appliance type and complexity, the scope of the repair, and your local labor market. Sealed-system appliances like refrigerators cost far more than dryers or disposals, and a single-part swap is much cheaper than multi-component or refrigerant work. Technician rates range from about $50 an hour in rural markets to $125 to $175 an hour in metros like New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Parts origin and 2025 to 2026 tariffs, brand and parts availability, appliance age, gas versus electric, smart-appliance control boards, after-hours scheduling, and coastal corrosion all move the number too.

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