With roots going back to 1918 and a place in history as the pioneer of the self-contained home refrigerator, Frigidaire builds appliances made to last — and in North Dakota they deserve a technician who understands that pedigree. We are the recognised name for frigidaire repair North Dakota, reaching communities and neighborhoods across North Dakota, and we cover every Frigidaire line: refrigeration, cooking, dishwashing, laundry and ice.

What North Dakota’s environment does to a Frigidaire
North Dakota faces some of the most extreme cold in the country, and a Frigidaire kitchen has to survive it. A garage FFFU upright freezer or FFTW washer works against the cold, and very cold gas can make an FFGF range burner harder to light cleanly. The deep cold and dry prairie air crack refrigerator and oven door gaskets through the freeze-thaw cycle, so gasket replacement, igniter service and defrost-heater work anchor our service across the Peace Garden State.
Where we work across North Dakota
We cover every community and the communities around them on a scheduled rotation. The smaller towns and country properties of North Dakota are folded into a regular service rotation, and we plan routes so a single trip usually settles the repair. Our footprint reaches all 50 states and DC, the booking line is open day and night, and a standard 24-48 hour response window keeps North Dakota service prompt.
Frigidaire appliances covered by Frigidaire repair North Dakota
Every Frigidaire appliance for the US market is comfortably covered by our specialist technicians:
- 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
- Wine Coolers — FFWC freestanding and FGWC undercounter wine coolers with dual temperature zones, UV-resistant tinted glass and wire shelving — serviced by symptom (not cooling, compressor noise, lights out, door-seal faults), with electronic models showing F1/F2/F3 or HH/LL alerts
- 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
- 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
- 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
- Dryers — Frigidaire FFRE and FFRG dryers — electronic-display models reading E-codes such as E64 or E66, with restricted airflow diagnosed as a clogged-vent symptom (clothes damp, long cycles)
- Washers — Frigidaire FFTW and FFFW washers — front-load models serviced from the E-code mapping (E11/E13 fill, E21/E23 drain, E41-E43 door lock, EF1/EF2 filter/suds) shown on the display; top-load units are largely symptom-led
- Dishwashers — Frigidaire FFID, FGID and GDPH dishwashers with the filter and OrbitClean spray arm and EvenDry — serviced from the “i” code set (i10 fill, i20/i40 drain, i30 leak/float, iC0 communication), shown on the display or LED indicators
- Cooktops — Frigidaire FFEC, FFGC and FFIC cooktops (electric, gas and induction) — symptom-led work covering a burner that clicks without lighting, a radiant element stuck on or off, and an induction zone that will not recognise compatible cookware
- Wall Ovens — single (FFEW) and double (FFET) electric Frigidaire wall ovens with Air Fry and Steam Clean — serviced from the F30/F31 sensor and F90/F91 door-lock codes (these are electric, thermal ovens)
- 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
- Refrigerators — Frigidaire FFTR, FRFG and FFSS refrigerators built around PureAir air management, the in-door ice and water dispenser and PureSource filtration — serviced from cooling, ice and water symptoms, plus the PF, dF and SY EF display alerts
Recurring North Dakota faults
Most North Dakota service calls come down to extreme-cold ignition and freeze-cracked gaskets, in our experience. The leading North Dakota complaint is a gas range burner that will not ignite or clicks — moisture in the port, a dirty igniter, or a mis-seated cap, all symptom-led since the burners have no code. Read honestly, on the cooking side an F30 or F31 points at the oven sensor, an F90 or F91 at the door lock, and an F10 at a temperature runaway that must be met by pulling the power; i-codes belong to the dishwasher — i10 low or no fill, i20, i40 and iF0 drain restriction, i30 leak or float, iC0 communication; and a front-load washer stuck mid-cycle often shows E21 for the drain or E41 for the door lock. On a Frigidaire, SY EF and SY CE are the refrigerator evaporator-fan and communication alerts, and PF is a power-failure notice. We read each signal honestly and stock the common Frigidaire parts on every North Dakota van.
Fault codes and symptoms explained
Across North Dakota we get asked what the letters mean, and the honest answer depends on the appliance. The pattern holds: a dishwasher announces a drain restriction as i20 or i40, and a float or leak as i30; an E11 on a washer is a fill that is taking too long, and an E21 is a drain that is doing the same; a dryer showing E64 needs the element, and one showing nothing but damp clothes usually needs the vent cleared; and a range or wall oven reads F30 or F31 at the oven sensor, F90 or F91 at the door lock after a self-clean, and F10 for a temperature runaway that means disconnecting the power immediately. Stated simply, no code exists for a gas burner, a cooktop element or a freezer, and we never dress a symptom up as one. Our error-code library spells each one out.
Maintenance advice for North Dakota
Seasonal upkeep keeps a North Dakota kitchen out of trouble. The habits that keep a Frigidaire out of trouble in North Dakota are simple: dry burner ports, a clean dishwasher filter and OrbitClean spray arm, a clear dryer vent, sealed door gaskets, and a water filter changed on schedule. When a fault does show — an i20 that will not drain, an E11 long fill, an F30 oven sensor code — get it read properly rather than resetting it, and treat an F10 temperature runaway as a disconnect-the-power emergency.
Booking and pricing in North Dakota
We quote before we work, never after. A North Dakota diagnostic visit begins from $89, the repair figure is set by the model, the parts and the configuration, and you approve the written estimate before a technician opens the appliance. For North Dakota customers that means genuine OEM parts and a 30-day labor warranty on the labor we perform. Use our online scheduling form to book anywhere in North Dakota, or browse our repair services; original specs live at the manufacturer’s site at frigidaire.com.