A washing machine that won’t drain or spin can bring laundry day to a halt — but before you shop for a new one, know that most washer problems are very repairable, and far cheaper than a replacement. Here’s how to decide.

The quick rule

If the repair costs less than about half the price of a comparable new washer, and yours is still within its normal lifespan, repairing is the better value. Most washing machines last 10–13 years, and a typical repair is a fraction of the $600–$1,500+ a new unit costs.

Common washer problems — and whether they’re worth fixing

  • Won’t drain — usually a clogged drain hose, a stuck pump, or a worn belt. Inexpensive and very worthwhile.
  • Won’t spin — often a lid switch, drive belt, or motor coupler. A common, affordable repair.
  • Leaking water — typically a hose, pump seal, or tub gasket. Worth fixing before it damages your floor.
  • Won’t fill — usually the inlet valve or a clogged screen. Cheap to repair.
  • Won’t start or an error code — often the lid lock, control board, or a simple reset; usually repairable.
  • Loud or banging on spin — can be a worn tub bearing. That job is bigger, so on an older machine weigh it against replacement.

When replacement makes sense

Lean toward a new washer when it’s past ~12–13 years, needs a major repair (motor, transmission, or tub bearing) on an older unit, the repair would cost more than half of a comparable new model, or it’s leaking from a cracked tub. A newer high-efficiency model can also cut water and energy use.

If that’s the call, we sell brand-new washers (never used or refurbished) at competitive prices — browse new washing machines. Choosing a new one? See our washing machine buying guide. Replacing the set? Ask about matching washer-and-dryer pairs.

Not sure? Get an honest answer first.

A quick diagnosis tells you exactly what’s wrong and whether it’s worth fixing — with no pressure either way.

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See our full repair-or-replace guide · Appliance repair FAQ