About Ice Maker Repair
Ice-maker service is Consumer Reports' number-two refrigerator complaint (13% of all fridge calls). The four failure modes are predictable: water inlet valve fails closed (no water reaches the tray), water inlet valve fails open (slow flooding of the freezer), auger motor fails (ice in tray but won't dispense), and water-line freeze-up (caused by a too-low freezer setpoint or a kinked supply line). Sub-Zero and Viking built-in ice makers have their own service path because the components are accessed from front-trim panels rather than the back of the unit. Standalone undercounter ice makers (Scotsman, U-Line) are an entirely separate niche.
ApplianceAce connects US homeowners with vetted local licensed appliance repair technicians who specialize in ice maker repair. We answer the routing line 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, every day of the year — including Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's, and every other holiday. When you call (866) 830-6505, the dispatch system routes you to the closest available local technician serving your ZIP, with diagnostic visits charged at the rate the local pro provides directly, a written repair quote before any work begins, and payment goes directly to the local appliance repair technician — never to ApplianceAce. ApplianceAce earns its referral fee from the pro — you never pay us.
Common ice maker repair problems we fix
These are the failure modes the ApplianceAce network sees most often for ice maker repair. If your appliance is doing one of these, a local licensed technician can almost always diagnose and quote the repair in one visit.
Not making ice
An ice maker producing nothing has a frozen fill tube, a failed water-inlet valve, or a stalled harvest motor. The pro thaws and inspects the fill line at the back of the freezer first — it's the most common cause.
Making slow
Slow ice production usually means low water pressure to the inlet valve, a partially clogged water filter, or a freezer running too warm. The pro checks filter age and freezer temperature.
Leaking water into freezer
Water leaking and freezing in the bottom of the freezer points to a misaligned fill cup, an overfilling inlet valve, or a cracked fill tube. The pro adjusts the fill and tests the valve shutoff.
Ice cubes too small
Undersized or hollow cubes mean low water flow — a clogged filter, a weak inlet valve, or low household water pressure. Replacing an overdue filter fixes most of these.
Ice tastes bad
Off-tasting ice is almost always an overdue water filter or stale ice that's absorbed freezer odors. The pro replaces the filter and recommends a fresh-ice cycle; a moldy supply line is a rarer cause.
Dispenser jammed
A jammed ice dispenser has clumped ice bridging the bucket, a failed dispenser auger motor, or a stuck dispenser door flap. The pro clears the bridge and tests the auger.
If your specific symptom isn't on this list, that doesn't mean we can't fix it — most ice maker repair failures fall outside neat textbook patterns once an appliance is past its 5-year mark, and the diagnostic visit exists exactly to identify the underlying cause. Call (866) 830-6505 to describe what's happening and we'll route you to a local pro who's seen it before.
What causes ice maker repair failures
The single biggest predictor of ice maker repair service-call volume is appliance age. Manufacturers design household appliances around a 10-13 year service life for major components (compressors, motors, control boards) and a 3-5 year life for high-wear parts (gaskets, pumps, igniters, thermal fuses). Failures cluster predictably around those wear-life inflection points.
Beyond age, the next-largest cause of ice maker repair failures is operating environment: water hardness (drives dishwasher and ice-maker failures), ambient temperature swings (drives refrigerator compressor wear), humidity (drives dryer not-drying complaints), and electrical-supply quality (voltage sags damage control boards). The ApplianceAce network's local pros are trained to spot environmental causes during the diagnostic visit, not just replace the broken part — that's the difference between a 6-month re-failure and a 6-year fix.
Brand quality also matters but matters less than most homeowners think. The OpenBrand Q1 2025 market study found that consumer-grade brands (Whirlpool, GE, Maytag, Frigidaire) and premium brands (LG, Samsung, KitchenAid, Bosch) had statistically similar 5-year failure rates — the difference shows up at the 8-12 year mark, where premium brands maintain a meaningful edge. Luxury sealed-system brands (Sub-Zero, Wolf, Viking, Miele, Thermador) require specialist factory training to service correctly, which the dispatch routing automatically prioritizes when you report one of those brands on the intake call.
Brands we service for ice maker repair
Network technicians have factory training across every major and luxury appliance brand sold in the US market. Ice Maker Repair jobs come in across the full brand spectrum — workhorse mid-market units, premium full-feature units, and sealed-system luxury units that require specialist parts inventory.
Need ice maker repair today? Call now — open 24/7 including holidays.
We connect you to a local appliance repair technician serving your ZIP in minutes. Local pro sets and quotes all pricing; you pay the local pro directly.
Repair or replace? How to think about ice maker repair
The standard industry heuristic is the 50% rule: if the repair quote is uneconomical of the cost of a comparable new appliance and the unit is more than halfway through its expected lifespan, replacement is usually the better economic call. For most household appliances that means roughly the 7-10 year mark — younger units almost always penciling toward repair, older units toward replacement.
The 50% rule has two important exceptions. First, luxury sealed-system brands (Sub-Zero, Wolf, Viking) have 15-20 year service lives, which means repair pencils out well past the 10-year mark for those units. Second, mid-market units that fail in their warranty window or just outside it often have manufacturer-paid or steeply discounted repair paths that make replacement uneconomic even when the math otherwise suggests it.
The diagnostic visit is what gives you the numbers to make the decision. The local pro will pull the appliance forward, run the diagnostic tests, and quote both the part cost and the labor cost so you can compare against a current-model replacement price. Network pros are trained to give you the honest answer — not to upsell a repair that doesn't pencil. That's part of why call-back rates across the ApplianceAce network are below the industry average.
What to expect when the ice maker repair pro arrives
The local technician arrives in a marked service vehicle within the time window you confirmed at booking. They'll ask to see the failing appliance, note the model and serial number (usually on a sticker inside the door or on the back panel), and run the diagnostic tests appropriate to that appliance class. The diagnostic visit typically runs 30-60 minutes and produces a written repair quote covering the scope, parts, labor, and warranty terms — all set and disclosed by the independent local pro before any work begins.
You authorize or decline the repair on the spot. If you authorize and the part is on the truck, the repair usually completes in the same visit. If the part isn't stocked — which happens most often with sealed-system refrigerator components and specialized luxury-brand parts — the pro orders it and returns within 2-5 business days. You pay the local technician directly via card, check, or cash depending on their accepted methods. ApplianceAce never handles the payment.
24/7 and holiday ice maker repair service
The ApplianceAce routing line is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, including every U.S. holiday. The phone is answered by a real person — never a voicemail tree — and your call is routed to a local licensed pro who serves your ZIP. For standard service calls, the local pro's rates apply during weekend daytime hours at the same diagnostic visit set by the local pro. After-hours overnight calls (10 p.m. to 6 a.m.) and major-holiday calls (Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, New Year's Day) have rates set by the local pro — because the local pro is leaving family time to get to your address. The premium is quoted upfront before the visit is booked, so there are no surprises on the invoice.
The most common emergency ice maker repair calls the network handles involve safety or property-damage risk: refrigerator failures with food spoilage at stake, gas-appliance issues, and water leaks that risk floor or cabinet damage. If you call about one of those, the dispatch routing prioritizes your request above standard same-day scheduling.
Ice Maker Repair across the United States
Looking for ice maker repair near me, ice maker repair in your city, or a ice maker repair technician in your state? The ApplianceAce network dispatches local licensed pros for ice maker repair in all 50 states. Tap any city or state below, or call (866) 830-6505 24/7 to be routed to the closest available pro.
Ice Maker Repair in major US cities
Ice Maker Repair by state
Don't see your city or ZIP? Call (866) 830-6505 — our routing system covers 16,000+ US cities and towns including most rural ZIPs.
Frequently asked questions about ice maker repair
How does pricing work for ice maker repair?
ApplianceAce does not set pricing. The independent local technician we connect you with provides a written repair quote directly to you before any work begins — covering the scope, parts, labor, and warranty terms. You review it, you authorize or decline, and you pay the local pro directly only after the work is complete. ApplianceAce is a free referral service for homeowners; we earn a referral fee from the pro, never from you.
How fast can a pro come out?
Same-day service is the default for ice maker repair calls placed before noon — the dispatch system routes you to the closest available local pro with open afternoon availability. Calls placed after noon typically schedule for the following morning at the latest. Emergency calls (refrigerator failure with food at stake, gas appliance issues, water leaks) get prioritized above standard scheduling, including overnight and holiday hours.
Are the pros employees or independent businesses?
Every technician in the ApplianceAce ice maker repair network is an independent local licensed business. ApplianceAce is a referral marketplace — we vet pros for licensing, insurance, and customer-review history, then route service requests to them. The pros set their own rates within market norms and you pay them directly. ApplianceAce earns its referral fee from the pro, not from you.
What if the part isn't on the truck?
Local pros stock the highest-frequency parts for ice maker repair on the truck (drain pumps, thermal fuses, igniters, common control boards, door gaskets), and roughly 75-80% of ice maker repair calls finish in the first visit because the part is already on board. If a non-stock OEM part is needed, the pro orders it and schedules a return visit, typically within 2-5 business days. No extra charge on the return.
Do you service all brands?
Yes. Network technicians service every major appliance brand sold in the US — Samsung, LG, Whirlpool, GE, Maytag, Frigidaire, KitchenAid, Bosch, Kenmore, Electrolux, Sub-Zero, Wolf, Viking, Miele, Thermador, and more. The dispatch routing prioritizes brand-specific specialists when you describe a luxury or sealed-system appliance on the intake call.