Depth across a single brand is what makes a New York visit efficient: one technician knows the cooking, the cold and the laundry sides of the Frigidaire lineup. That is what our frigidaire repair New York service provides throughout New York, from New York City to communities statewide. A Frigidaire is built to be dependable and straightforward, and in New York it deserves a technician who works on the brand every day.

Statewide service throughout New York
We dispatch experienced technicians to metro areas including New York City. Outlying towns and rural properties throughout New York are served on a scheduled rotation, with most repairs finished on the first visit. We cover all 50 states and the District of Columbia through a nationwide technician network, our dispatch desk takes New York requests around the clock, and a standard 24-48 hour response keeps wait times short.
The local angle behind Frigidaire repair New York
New York spans Long Island salt air, dense New York City apartments and the harsh upstate cold, and a Frigidaire suite meets all three. Coastal humidity works on stainless trim and control boards; city apartments run compact Frigidaire kitchens — FFTR top-freezer refrigerators, FCRE ranges and FFID dishwashers — where freight-elevator access and tight kitchens shape every heavy-unit service call; and upstate winters crack door gaskets. We tailor service to each region — corrosion, igniter cleaning and gasket work alike.
Every Frigidaire appliance we repair in New York
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 — 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
Genuine codes, accurately diagnosed
Honesty matters here: a Frigidaire in New York displays real, manufacturer-defined codes where it has a control board, and where it does not we never invent one. Put plainly, for washers the E-code set runs E11 and E13 on fill, E21 and E23 on drain, and E41 to E43 on the door lock; a dryer that runs long is usually a vent restriction, which carries no code, rather than the E64 element fault; 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 i-codes belong to the dishwasher — i10 low or no fill, i20, i40 and iF0 drain restriction, i30 leak or float, iC0 communication. Read honestly, gas burners, cooktops, freezers and the legacy compactor carry no fault codes at all, so they are read by symptom, and the evaporator fan behind a refrigerator that has stopped cooling shows as SY EF, and communication trouble as SY CE. Both the codes and their fixes live in our error-code library.
Faults common to New York homes
Most New York service calls come down to apartment access and regional climate swings, in our experience. On the cooking side, New York owners report continuous clicking from a wet FFGF burner port, a no-light from a clogged port or a weak igniter, and F-codes (F30 sensor, F90 door lock, F10 temperature runaway) on the electric oven. In short, the washer E-codes cover fill (E11, E13), drain (E21, E23), door lock (E41) and filter or suds (EF1, EF2), and dishwashers report i10, i20, i30, i40, iC0 and iF0, with the drain codes by far the most common. Stated simply, an E64 on a dryer means the element has opened, and E5B, E24 and E25 cover the control side; the evaporator fan behind a refrigerator that has stopped cooling shows as SY EF, and communication trouble as SY CE; and a freezer that stops freezing and a cooktop element that stays cold both arrive without a code. We resolve those at the same visit, parts in hand.
Protecting your Frigidaire in New York
Preventive care is the quiet half of Frigidaire ownership in New York. Preventive care is the quiet half of Frigidaire ownership in New York: 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. A returning F-code, a burner clicking after a dry-out, or an oven that never reaches temperature is your signal to book a technician instead of waiting.
Pricing and scheduling
Here is how a New York appointment is priced. Expect a diagnostic visit from $89 in New York; the repair beyond that follows the model, the parts and the configuration, and it goes to you in writing for approval before work starts. In New York the parts we fit are genuine OEM, and our labor comes with a 30-day labor warranty. Schedule a New York visit with our online scheduling form, look over our repair services, and read the original specifications at the manufacturer’s site at frigidaire.com.