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.
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.
| Repair | Typical all-in range | What moves it |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnostic / service call fee | $50–$100 | Often waived/credited if repair is approved |
| Dryer belt replacement | $100–$200 | Access, brand part availability |
| Dryer heating element | $150–$300 | Electric vs gas, part cost |
| Washer pump or lid switch | $150–$250 | Part rating, top- vs front-load |
| Washing machine control board | $200–$400 | Smart/connected boards run higher |
| Dishwasher pump or spray arm | $150–$300 | Brand, parts availability |
| Refrigerator ice maker | $150–$350 | OEM vs aftermarket, brand |
| Refrigerator compressor (sealed system) | $700–$1,250+ | Welding + refrigerant recharge, tariffs |
| Oven element / gas igniter | $150–$300 | Electric element vs gas igniter |
| Glass cooktop replacement | $400–$600+ | Glass alone $150–$350 + labor |
| After-hours / weekend | +$50–$110 | Holidays 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.
Across six pricing sources published in 2025 and 2026, residential appliance repair clusters like this:
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.
Seven drivers explain almost the entire range. In rough order of impact:
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.
These are verified 2026 all-in bands that include the diagnostic and labor.
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.
Two homes with the same broken appliance can get very different quotes. You'll pay more when:
You'll pay less when:
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:
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.
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.
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.
Build your flat-rate appliance pricebook, take a deposit on special-order parts, and invoice by card or ACH before you leave. Claver starts at $19/mo, month-to-month — start in minutes.