Available for Same-Day Service

Refrigerator Repair in Waldorf, MD

Cooling issues, leaks, and ice maker problems — fixed fast. Trusted refrigerator repair for Waldorf homeowners.

Fast Response

Same or next day

Warranty Included

90 days on parts & labor

Local Expert

Serving DMV since 2010

Trusted Refrigerator Repair in Waldorf, MD

A warm refrigerator means spoiled groceries, so refrigerator repair is our most urgent same-day call. Our technicians fix cooling failures, frost buildup, water leaks, broken ice makers, and noisy compressors on every brand — from Sub-Zero built-ins to standard Whirlpool and LG units.

Waldorf is Charles County's largest population center, anchored by the St. Charles Towne Center retail corridor and extensive suburban residential development that's grown steadily since the 1980s. It's on the outer edge of our core DMV coverage, but we service it with the same same-or-next-day standard as closer-in communities.

Arnie's has served the Waldorf area since 2010. When you call, we route the nearest available technician to your neighborhood, usually same or next day.

Refrigerator Repair across every Waldorf neighborhood

St. Charles · Pinefield · Westlake · Bannister Point · Carrington

Covering ZIP codes 20601, 20602, and 20603. Same-day and next-day slots available across all of them.

Common problems we fix

  • Fridge not cooling or freezer not freezing
  • Water leaking under or inside the unit
  • Ice maker not making or dispensing ice
  • Loud buzzing, humming, or clicking
  • Frost building up in the freezer

Our refrigerator repair services

  • Compressor and sealed-system diagnostics
  • Evaporator and condenser fan motor replacement
  • Thermostat and temperature control repair
  • Ice maker and water line service
  • Door seal/gasket replacement

A note for Waldorf homeowners: Waldorf's water comes through Charles County's supply rather than WSSC, and hardness can run a bit higher in parts of the county — if you're seeing scale buildup in a dishwasher or ice maker, a slightly more frequent descaling schedule than the standard recommendation is worth trying before assuming a mechanical fault.

All major brands, factory-certified

We are factory-certified for Sub-Zero and built-in refrigeration, and repair all standard brands including LG, Samsung, Whirlpool, GE, Frigidaire, and KitchenAid.

Refrigerator Repair in Waldorf: a complete guide

A refrigerator is a closed-loop cooling system: a compressor pressurizes refrigerant gas, it releases heat as it condenses in the coils on the back or bottom of the unit, then absorbs heat from inside the fridge as it evaporates again near the evaporator coil behind the back panel of the freezer. A fan pushes that cold air through the fridge and freezer compartments, and a thermostat or electronic control cycles the compressor on and off to hold temperature. Almost every cooling complaint traces back to one of four points in that loop: the compressor itself, the condenser coils, the evaporator fan, or a sealed-system leak.

When a fridge runs constantly but won't get cold, the most common cause is dirty condenser coils — they can't release heat efficiently, so the compressor works harder and longer without catching up; this is also the single easiest problem for a homeowner to prevent with an annual coil vacuuming. When only the freezer stays cold but the fridge section doesn't, or vice versa, that almost always points to a failed evaporator fan motor or a blocked air-return duct between compartments rather than the compressor. A refrigerator that's warm throughout with the compressor not running at all usually means a failed start relay, a bad compressor, or a control board that isn't sending power — each requiring a different part, which is why an accurate diagnosis matters before ordering anything.

Water on the floor in front of or inside the fridge is a separate system entirely from cooling: it's almost always a clogged or frozen defrost drain line, a cracked drain pan, or (for units with an ice maker) a water line or valve connection. Ice makers themselves fail in a predictable order — the water inlet valve, the fill tube (which freezes shut if airflow into the freezer is restricted), and finally the ice maker module — so we test each stage rather than replacing the whole assembly on a guess.

A refrigerator repair visit typically starts with checking coil temperature and compressor amperage draw against the compressor's rated spec, testing evaporator fan speed, and pressure-testing the sealed system if there's any sign of a slow leak (frost patterns, hissing, or a compressor that runs nonstop without cycling). Most repairs — fan motors, thermostats, door seals, water valves, ice maker modules — are completed in a single visit with parts carried on the truck. A sealed-system repair (compressor or refrigerant leak) is less common and takes longer, since it requires recovering and recharging refrigerant to factory spec.

Refrigerators are one of the clearer repair-vs-replace calls: a compressor or sealed-system replacement can run several hundred dollars, which only makes sense on a unit under about 8 years old or a high-end built-in (Sub-Zero, Thermador) where replacement means a new custom cabinet cutout. Everything short of a sealed-system failure — fans, valves, boards, seals — is almost always worth repairing regardless of age, since parts cost a fraction of a new refrigerator.

To keep a healthy refrigerator healthy: vacuum the condenser coils once or twice a year, keep at least 2 inches of clearance behind and above the unit for airflow, don't set the freezer colder than necessary (it just makes the compressor work harder for no benefit), and replace the water filter on schedule if you have an ice maker — a clogged filter is a common, overlooked cause of slow ice production and valve strain.

One habit that's easy to overlook: check the door seal on both the fridge and freezer compartments a couple of times a year using a simple test — close the door on a piece of paper or a dollar bill and see if it slides out with resistance. A seal that's lost its grip lets warm, humid air seep in continuously, forcing the compressor to run longer than it should and accelerating wear on components that would otherwise last the full lifespan of the unit.

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 is my refrigerator not cooling but the light works? +

This usually points to a failed evaporator fan, a faulty compressor or start relay, or a sealed-system issue rather than a power problem. It needs a technician to diagnose safely.

How long does a refrigerator repair take? +

Most common repairs are completed in a single visit, often under an hour, when we have the part on the truck.

My ice maker stopped working — is that worth fixing? +

Ice maker repairs are typically inexpensive relative to the appliance, so they are almost always worth fixing rather than living without ice.

Need refrigerator repair in Waldorf, MD?

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

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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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