Available for Same-Day Service

Dishwasher Repair in Oxon Hill, MD

Drainage problems and poor cleaning — solved. Trusted dishwasher repair for Oxon Hill homeowners.

Fast Response

Same or next day

Warranty Included

90 days on parts & labor

Local Expert

Serving DMV since 2010

Trusted Dishwasher Repair in Oxon Hill, MD

A dishwasher that won’t drain or leaves dishes dirty wastes water and time. We fix drainage failures, leaks, poor cleaning, and units that won’t start or finish a cycle — restoring your kitchen’s efficiency on all major and luxury brands.

Oxon Hill sits along the Maryland side of the Potomac just south of DC, with a mix of established single-family neighborhoods and newer development near National Harbor. Homes here are largely mid-to-late-20th-century construction with the standard range of appliance ages you'd expect from a mature Prince George's County suburb.

We've served Oxon Hill since 2010. When you call, we route the nearest technician to your neighborhood — usually same or next day, with common parts on the truck for most repairs.

Dishwasher Repair across every Oxon Hill neighborhood

Glassmanor · Friendly · Fort Foote border · Rosecroft area · Livingston

Covering ZIP code 20745. Same-day and next-day slots available across all of them.

Common problems we fix

  • Dishwasher won’t drain or has standing water
  • Dishes come out dirty or filmy
  • Leaking onto the kitchen floor
  • Won’t start, fill, or complete a cycle
  • Strange noises or foul odors

Our dishwasher repair services

  • Drain pump and valve replacement
  • Spray arm and wash motor service
  • Door seal and gasket replacement
  • Float switch and control board repair
  • Inlet valve and water-supply diagnostics

A note for Oxon Hill homeowners: Many Oxon Hill homes are within their second or third decade of ownership, so a fair share of our calls involve original-to-the-house appliances reaching natural end-of-life — we'll always test the specific failure point and give you a clear repair-vs-replace read rather than assuming age alone settles the question.

All major brands, factory-certified

We service all dishwasher brands, with particular expertise in Bosch, Miele, KitchenAid, GE, Whirlpool, and Samsung.

Dishwasher Repair in Oxon Hill: a complete guide

A dishwasher runs a repeating cycle of filling, spraying hot water through rotating arms, draining, and repeating for wash and rinse stages, all timed and sequenced by a control board reading a water-level float switch and (on newer units) a turbidity sensor that judges how dirty the water is. Because the wash and drain systems are largely separate, a dishwasher can drain perfectly fine while cleaning poorly, or clean fine while failing to drain — which is why 'my dishwasher is broken' covers several distinct, separately-diagnosable problems.

A dishwasher that won't drain or leaves standing water is most often a clogged drain pump or filter basket (food debris is the top cause, especially in households that don't pre-scrape dishes), a kinked or improperly looped drain hose, or in some installations, an air gap or garbage disposal knockout plug that was never removed during installation. We check the simplest, cheapest cause first — the filter basket, which most homeowners have never removed and cleaned — before moving to the pump.

Dishes coming out dirty or filmy despite a completed cycle usually traces back to clogged spray arm jets (mineral deposits or food particles blocking the small holes), a worn wash pump that can't build enough water pressure, or water that isn't reaching an adequate temperature — dishwashers rely on the home's hot water supply reaching the unit hot, so a water heater set too low can look exactly like a dishwasher malfunction. A white filmy residue specifically is usually hard water mineral buildup rather than a mechanical fault, and is solved with a rinse-aid adjustment or an occasional citric-acid cleaning cycle rather than a repair.

Leaks show up in three places, each with a different cause: under the door (a worn door gasket, or a rack rail that's rubbing and damaging the gasket over time), underneath the unit (a cracked tub, a loose hose clamp, or a failing pump seal), or into the cabinet below (usually a drain-side or supply-side connection issue from the original installation). We trace the water path during a running cycle rather than guessing from where puddles appear, since dishwasher leaks are notorious for showing up several feet from their actual source.

Most dishwasher repairs — pumps, spray arms, door seals, inlet valves, control boards — are same-visit jobs and are almost always worth doing rather than replacing, since even a control board replacement is typically a fraction of a new unit's cost, and that math tilts even further toward repair for built-in panel-ready or luxury brand (Miele, Bosch, KitchenAid) dishwashers designed to match custom cabinetry.

To keep a dishwasher running well: clean the bottom filter basket monthly (this single habit prevents most drainage and odor complaints), scrape but don't over-rinse dishes before loading (some food residue actually helps the turbidity sensor calibrate the cycle correctly), run a citric-acid or dishwasher-cleaner cycle every few months if your water is hard, and check that spray arms spin freely and aren't hitting oversized dishes, which is a common cause of arm and motor wear over time.

It's also worth paying attention to loading habits: blocking the spray arm's rotation with a tall pot or oversized platter is one of the most common reasons a full load comes out with some dishes clean and others not, and it's mistaken for a mechanical problem far more often than it's reported as a loading issue. Similarly, using rinse aid consistently does more than reduce spotting — it helps water sheet off surfaces during the dry cycle, which reduces the standing moisture that can otherwise contribute to musty odors between cycles.

One more habit worth building in: run the hot water tap at the kitchen sink for a few seconds before starting a dishwasher cycle, especially if the dishwasher is on a long supply run from the water heater. Dishwashers don't heat cold water the way some homeowners assume — they rely largely on the hot water already coming through the supply line — so starting a cycle with cold water sitting in the pipe means the first several minutes of the wash run cooler than intended, which shows up as underwhelming cleaning performance that has nothing to do with the machine itself.

What Our Neighbors Say

★★★★★

"Arnie's saved my Thanksgiving! My oven died two days before, and they came out same-day. Professional and fair pricing."

Sarah Jenkins

Arlington, VA

★★★★★

"The AI diagnostic tool on the website was actually spot on. It predicted a drain pump issue, and the tech arrived with the part."

Mike Ross

Fairfax, VA

★★★★★

"Honest service. Another company told me I needed a new fridge, but Arnie's fixed it for a fraction of the cost."

Elena Rodriguez

Washington DC

Frequently asked questions

Why won’t my dishwasher drain? +

Most often a clogged or failed drain pump, a blocked filter, or a kinked drain hose. We clear or replace the failed part and test a full cycle.

Why are my dishes still dirty after a cycle? +

Common causes are clogged spray arms, a worn wash pump, or low water temperature. We diagnose and restore proper cleaning performance.

My dishwasher is leaking — is it urgent? +

Yes, leaks can damage flooring and cabinets. Stop using it and call us; the fix is usually a door seal or valve.

Need dishwasher repair in Oxon Hill, MD?

Same-day appointments available. Honest pricing, 90-day warranty.

Call 703-479-1822 Now

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Northern Virginia703-479-1822
Maryland301-720-0001
Washington DC202-569-0852

Business Hours

Mon-Sat: 8am - 7pm

Emergency service available on Sundays

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