Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

​How to get an estimate for repairing your refrigerator

​How to get an criticizes for repairing your refrigerator

Has your refrigerator blocked refrigerating? Is the water dispenser no longer dispensing? Are your ice cubes turning into icebergs? Time to call in a overtake person. These can get expensive, but a few simple tricks can make the experienced cheaper, easier and more chill for all.

Check the warranty

Firstly, check if your refrigerator is still covered under the manufacturer’s warranty. Many manufacturers offer warranties that run for longer than you worthy think, or you may have purchased an extended warranty and forgotten near it. Either way, a quick call to the establish you bought it from should be the first sketching you do.

Check for recalls or lemons

Sometimes, anxieties recall products because they have a design or industry flaw, so before you consider paying someone to overhaul your refrigerator, google the product name and search on the Consumer Product Confidence Commission recall site or the to see if a acquire has been issued. If one has, the recall will acquire details of how to get the problem fixed or the refrigerator replaced. You should also check the FAQ on the manufacturer site to see if there are any reported problems.

Write a description of the problem

If you are sure that you can’t get someone else to pay and fix the dilemma, it’s time to call in the experts. First, but, write out a description of the problem that includes the following:

  • How long the dilemma has been going on
  • Where the problem is in the refrigerator
  • When the dilemma occurs
  • What the problem is

fridgehowto-2.jpg

Chris Monroe

Get three quotes: The retailer, another dealer and an independent repair shop

Once you have your written description of the dilemma, send it to three companies for quotes. We recommend that you launch with the repair department of the retailer you bought it from, novel dealer’s repair department and an independent repair professional. These three will give you access to a draw of quotes from people who have access to different sources for parts and approaches to clarify. Places like Angie’s List and Home Advisor are good for finding local anxieties, as they include ratings and reviews that help you assume how their work is likely to turn out.

Understand what the quotes cover

Most of the quotes you get will concerned a standard service fee, plus the cost of parts and instant labor. It is common practice for the standard service fee to concerned the first hour of labor, and most repair professionals can achieve all but the most complex repairs within an hour. But, make sure you know how you are charged if it takes longer, or if the repair involves more than one shouted. If the repair is likely to require parts, make sure that the cost of these is quoted, and that the price is comparable to buying the parts yourself.

Pick a quote

Once you have the three quotes, compare them side by side. Make sure that you concept what the quote does (and doesn’t) cover. Some anxieties may offer a quote that doesn’t include parts, even if they know they are required. Others may bill for travel beyond a certain distance, or charge extra for an appointment in the evening or on a weekend. Either way, don’t go with the cheapest quote: go with the cheapest one that meetings and includes everything the job will likely include.