A Frigidaire is built to be dependable and straightforward, and in New Jersey it deserves a technician who works on the brand every day. That is what our frigidaire repair New Jersey service provides throughout New Jersey. A Frigidaire is built to be dependable and straightforward, and in New Jersey it deserves a technician who works on the brand every day.

What New Jersey’s environment does to a Frigidaire
New Jersey couples a salt-air shoreline with genuine four-season weather. Atlantic humidity works on stainless trim and the control boards behind a Frigidaire range and dishwasher, while cold winters crack refrigerator and oven door gaskets. The state’s dense suburbs and Shore communities run plenty of Frigidaire kitchens with FCRE ranges, FFID dishwashers and FFRE dryers, so corrosion control, gasket service and igniter cleaning anchor our work.
Where we work across New Jersey
We cover every community and the communities around them on a scheduled rotation. We also serve the suburban and rural corners of New Jersey on a regular schedule, arriving stocked for the likely repair so a second trip is rarely needed. With nationwide coverage across all 50 states and DC and a dispatch desk open around the clock, our standard 24-48 hour response keeps New Jersey appointments quick.
Frigidaire appliances covered by Frigidaire repair New Jersey
Our experienced technicians service every Frigidaire appliance type for the US market:
- 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
- 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)
- 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
- 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
- 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
- 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 — Frigidaire FFFU upright and FFFC convertible chest freezers with garage-ready operation and a setpoint dial — symptom-led, covering not cold enough, frost buildup, running constantly and sealed-system faults
- 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
- 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 — legacy TC and TCU-family trash compactors — largely electromechanical units with no fault codes; these are discontinued and parts-only, so they are diagnosed entirely by symptom
- 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
Recurring New Jersey faults
Across the calls we take in New Jersey, a familiar set of complaints recurs, shaped by shore corrosion and four-season gasket faults. New Jersey faults cluster predictably: continuous clicking and no-light on FFGF gas burners (wet ports, clogged ports, weak igniters); a refrigerator not cooling (evaporator fan SY EF, a communication fault SY CE or a worn gasket); a range or oven not heating (F30 sensor or a bake element); a self-clean door that will not release (F90); and a dishwasher that will not drain (i20). In short, front-load washers report E-codes: E11 for fill, E21 for drain, E41 for the door lock and EF1 for the filter, and dryers report E-codes such as E64, E5B, E24 and E25, and read a blocked vent purely as a symptom. Most repairs are completed on the first visit with the parts already on the truck.
Fault codes and symptoms explained
What a New Jersey homeowner sees on the display is usually genuine, and it is worth reading before you reset it. The rule of thumb: an F10 on a range or wall oven is a temperature runaway and means the power comes off at once, while F30 and F31 point at the oven sensor and F90 and F91 at the door lock. For dishwashers the codes are i-prefixed: i10 fill, i20 and i40 drain, i30 leak, iC0 communication. The split is simple: a washer that takes too long to fill shows E11, and one that will not drain shows E21, and a dryer showing E64 needs the element, and one showing nothing but damp clothes usually needs the vent cleared. The honest version is this: freezers, cooktops, gas burners and compactors report nothing, which is why those calls are symptom-led. Our error-code library translates the lot.
Maintenance advice for New Jersey
Owners in New Jersey prevent most service calls with light maintenance: keep gas burner ports and igniters clean, dry a port promptly after a spill so it does not click, clean the dishwasher filter and clear the dryer vent before performance fades, and keep refrigerator and oven gaskets clean. Never ignore a recurring PF power-failure alert or a SY EF evaporator-fan code, and do not leave a dishwasher stuck on i40 — book an inspection instead. A couple of timely checks each year extend the life of the burners, the pumps and the electronics.
Booking and pricing in New Jersey
New Jersey owners get an honest number rather than a guess. In New Jersey the diagnostic call is from $89, and the repair figure is set at the appliance once the fault has been read, then confirmed in writing before a single screw comes out. We are an independent service in New Jersey, not affiliated with the manufacturer; we fit genuine OEM parts only, and we back our labor with a 30-day labor warranty. Our online scheduling form takes New Jersey bookings, our repair services page lists what we repair, and the manufacturer’s site at frigidaire.com has the specifications from the manufacturer.