When a Frigidaire appliance needs attention in Arizona, our experienced technicians deliver dependable, brand-specific repair. As the trusted source for frigidaire repair Arizona, we serve Phoenix and communities across Arizona, covering Frigidaire’s full lineup — FFTR, FRFG and FFSS refrigerators, FCRE and FFGF ranges, FFEW and FFET wall ovens, FFEC/FFGC/FFIC cooktops, FFFU and FFFC freezers, FFID dishwashers, FFTW and FFFW washers, FFRE and FFRG dryers, plus wine coolers, ice makers and the legacy compactor.

The Frigidaire lineup we service in Arizona
Every Frigidaire appliance for the US market is comfortably covered by our specialist technicians:
- Washers — FFTW top-load and FFFW front-load washers with the agitator or Stainless Steel Drum, MaxFill and Deep Fill — the front-loaders read genuine E-codes (E11/E13 water/fill, E21/E23 drain, E41-E43 door lock, EF1/EF2 filter/suds), while top-load mechanical faults are symptom-led
- Dryers — FFRE electric and FFRG gas dryers with DrySense moisture sensing, Anti-Wrinkle and Quick Dry — electronic-display models read E-codes (E64/E66), while a clogged vent that leaves clothes damp is the classic symptom we clear
- Ranges — freestanding Frigidaire ranges in electric (FCRE) and sealed-burner gas (FFGF) with Air Fry and Steam Clean self-clean — serviced from the oven F-code set (F10, F30, F90) and from ignition symptoms on the sealed gas burners, which carry no code
- Wall Ovens — FFEW single and FFET double electric wall ovens with the electronic controls, True Convection and adjustable self-clean — read from the same F-code scheme as the ranges, with F30/F31 sensor and F90 door-lock faults the common calls
- Cooktops — FFEC radiant, FFGC sealed-gas and FFIC induction cooktops with SpaceWise expandable elements or Quick Boil — serviced largely by symptom, since a gas burner that will not light or a radiant element that will not heat carries no consumer code (induction models may show E1/E6 or a 5F lockout)
- Dishwashers — FFID, FGID and GDPH built-in dishwashers with the dishwasher filter and OrbitClean spray arm, the third rack and NSF Sanitize — reading genuine “i” codes (i10 low or no fill, i20/i40/iF0 drain restriction, i30 leak/float, iC0 communication), shown on the display or LED indicators
- Refrigerators — FFTR top-freezer, FRFG French-door and FFSS side-by-side refrigerators with CrispSeal crispers, EvenTemp cooling and the PureSource water filter — read mostly by symptom, with the PF power-failure alert and display alerts like dF (defrost), SY EF (evaporator fan) and SY CE (communication) the consumer-facing signals
- Freezers — FFFU upright and FFFC chest freezers with Frost-Free operation, SpaceWise shelving and a door-ajar alarm — dial or simple-control units, so every not-freezing, frost or running-constantly fault is diagnosed by symptom
- Ice Makers — Frigidaire EFIC portable and FGIC 15-inch undercounter ice makers — symptom-led work covering no ice production, slow or hollow cubes, water-supply and inlet-valve faults, and drain or leak issues
- Ice Machines — Frigidaire residential ice making — the 15-inch FGIC undercounter unit and EFIC countertop ice makers — serviced by symptom (no ice, slow harvest, supply and drain faults); Frigidaire builds residential ice makers rather than standalone commercial ice machines
- Wine Coolers — Frigidaire FFWC and FGWC wine coolers — symptom-led work covering a cooler that will not hold temperature, compressor or fan noise, failed LED lighting and door-seal issues (electronic models show F1/F2/F3 or HH/LL)
- Trash Compactors — older Frigidaire TC and TCU compactors (discontinued, parts-only) — serviced by symptom alone (won’t start, motor runs but won’t compact, ram stuck, drawer jammed) since they carry no fault codes
Regional conditions behind Frigidaire repair Arizona
The Sonoran climate barely touches stainless trim, but extreme summer heat is brutal on the electronics in a Frigidaire kitchen. Triple-digit afternoons push an FFEW wall oven and an FCRE range control board harder, and a hot garage makes an FFFC chest freezer and an FFRE dryer run long. Arizona’s very hard water is the other story — it scales the dishwasher filter and OrbitClean spray arm on an FFID dishwasher and clogs the PureSource water filter line on an FFSS refrigerator — so descaling, filter and igniter service lead our Phoenix and Tucson calls.
How a Frigidaire reports trouble
Half the Frigidaire appliances in a typical Arizona home can report a fault and half cannot. To be precise, i-codes belong to the dishwasher — i10 low or no fill, i20, i40 and iF0 drain restriction, i30 leak or float, iC0 communication; a washer showing EF1 has a drain filter asking to be cleaned, while an E21 points further down the drain path; the dryer E64 points at the heating element, while E24 and E25 sit on the control side; and ranges and wall ovens speak F-codes: F1 at the control board, F11 at the keypad, F30 and F31 at the sensor, F90 and F91 at the door lock, and F10 at a temperature runaway — disconnect the power and stop using the appliance. The pattern holds: freezers, cooktops, gas burners and compactors report nothing, which is why those calls are symptom-led. We never dress a symptom up as a code, and our error-code library documents both.
Common Arizona repairs we handle
In Arizona homes, the bulk of our work involves heat-stressed electronics and hard-water scaling. Run through a month of Arizona work orders and the same names keep appearing. To be precise, the washer speaks in E-codes — E11 and E13 for water and fill, E21 and E23 for drain, E41 for the lock; a dryer that runs long is usually a vent restriction, which carries no code, rather than the E64 element fault; on the electric oven, F30 and F31 mean the sensor, and F90 and F91 mean the door lock that follows a self-clean; and dishwasher faults arrive as i-codes — i10, i20, i30, i40, iC0 and iF0. A refrigerator that stops cooling points at the evaporator fan (SY EF) or the defrost circuit, and an F10 temperature runaway is a stop-now, power-off fault.
Coverage and response across Arizona
We dispatch experienced technicians to metro areas including Phoenix. Every corner of Arizona — city block, suburb or back road — falls inside our distributed technician network, and slots are confirmed quickly once you book. We operate across all 50 states and the District of Columbia, take requests around the clock, and target a 24-48 hour response, with same-day visits where availability allows.
Seasonal upkeep for Arizona owners
The Arizona climate rewards a few simple habits. Dry out a gas burner port after spills or humid spells so it does not click continuously, change the PureSource water filter on schedule so ice and water keep flowing, clear the dryer vent so it never leaves clothes damp or trips an E64, and keep the dishwasher filter clean. Treat a recurring F90 door-lock fault or an i20 drain fault as a stop-and-call situation. Catching small issues early is far cheaper than replacing a control board or a drain pump.
What an Arizona service call costs
Arizona owners get an honest number rather than a guess. Across Arizona the diagnostic visit is from $89, and nothing else is promised sight unseen — the repair is quoted in writing after the technician has read the fault at the appliance. In Arizona the parts we fit are genuine OEM, and our labor comes with a 30-day labor warranty. Arizona bookings go through our online scheduling form; the repair services page sets out what we handle, and the manufacturer’s site at frigidaire.com carries the manufacturer detail.