Frigidaire builds dependable, easy-to-use American home appliances, and keeping them at their best in Kansas takes a specialist. Our team is the trusted name for frigidaire repair Kansas, reaching communities and neighborhoods across Kansas — and we service the whole catalogue, from refrigerators and ranges to wall ovens, cooktops, dishwashers, washers, dryers, wine coolers and ice makers.

What Kansas’s environment does to a Frigidaire
Kansas sits in the heart of tornado alley, where wind-driven dust and storm-season power flickers are constant. Those flickers frequently leave an FFEW wall oven or an FCRE range control board in a fault state across the Sunflower State, and grit can foul FFGF burner ports. Hot, dry summers bake oven and refrigerator gaskets, and the Kansas City suburbs run plenty of Frigidaire kitchens, so control resets, port cleaning and gasket service fill many visits.
Where we work across Kansas
We cover every community and the communities around them on a scheduled rotation. Every corner of Kansas — 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.
Frigidaire appliances covered by Frigidaire repair Kansas
We are equipped across the full Frigidaire lineup, from refrigerators and ranges to dishwashers, laundry, cooktops, wine coolers and the legacy compactor:
- 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 — 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)
- Ice Machines — residential Frigidaire ice production (undercounter FGIC and countertop EFIC units, not standalone commercial machines) — symptom-led service for no-ice, slow-ice, water-fill and drain problems
- 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 — 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
- 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
- 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 — 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
- Ranges — FCRE electric and FFGF gas ranges with the electronic controls, SpaceWise expandable elements or Quick Boil burners and Even Baking Technology — the electric oven reads genuine F-codes (F10 temperature runaway, F30/F31 oven sensor, F90/F91 door lock), while the gas burners are symptom-only
- 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
Recurring Kansas faults
The repairs Kansas owners ask for most cluster around storm-surge control faults and fouled burner ports. In Kansas the cooking appliances generate the noise and the laundry generates the volume. A gas burner clicking without lighting is almost always a wet or clogged port or a failing igniter, and it carries no code; an oven that will not heat reads F30 or F31 on the sensor, and a self-clean cycle that ends with a locked door reads F90. On the laundry side, a washer that will not fill reads E11 and one that will not drain reads E21, while a dryer that leaves clothes damp is usually a clogged vent, with E64 if the element itself has opened. A dishwasher completes the picture with i40 and i20, and the refrigerator with PF, SY EF and SY CE.
Fault codes and symptoms explained
Because Frigidaire spans touch-control ovens and simple dial-controlled freezers, a fault in a Kansas home appears as a genuine code only where there is electronics. On a Frigidaire, on a washer, E11 is a long fill, E21 is a long drain, and E41 is a door lock that will not engage; a range or wall oven puts a sensor fault on the display as F30 or F31, a door-lock fault as F90 or F91, and a temperature runaway as F10, which means disconnect the power and do not use it; and dishwasher faults arrive as i-codes — i10, i20, i30, i40, iC0 and iF0. The rule of thumb: a refrigerator uses display alerts rather than fault codes — PF after a power failure, SY EF at the evaporator fan, SY CE on a communication fault. Read honestly, the silent half of the lineup — gas burners, cooktops, freezers, the compactor — is read from behaviour alone. We read these honestly, and our error-code library explains every one.
Maintenance advice for Kansas
A Frigidaire in Kansas will run for years on a light routine. Preventive care is the quiet half of Frigidaire ownership in Kansas: clean and dry the burner ports, rinse the dishwasher filter, clear the full dryer vent path, and keep the refrigerator and oven door gaskets clean so they seal. Kansas owners can head most of this off — dry the burner ports after a spill, clean the dishwasher filter so the drain never restricts, brush out the dryer vent so clothes stop coming out damp, and swap the PureSource water filter when the reminder shows. And if a code comes back after a reset, book us — a fault that repeats is a part that is failing, not a glitch.
Booking and pricing in Kansas
A Kansas technician diagnoses first and prices second: the visit starts from $89, and what the repair costs after that depends on the model, the parts and how the appliance is installed — you see it in writing before anyone starts. Only genuine OEM parts go back into a Frigidaire in Kansas, and the labor we perform carries a 30-day labor warranty. Our online scheduling form takes Kansas bookings, our repair services page lists what we repair, and the manufacturer’s site at frigidaire.com has the specifications from the manufacturer.