Common Whirlpool dryer problems
Reliable Whirlpool dryer repair covers both fuel types — the electric WED dryers and the gas WGD dryers — built around the Wrinkle Shield option, AccuDry and Advanced Moisture Sensing, and the Sixth Sense sensor that judges the load. These dryers report genuine F#E# codes on electronic-display models, while the heat side stays the same job: get hot, sense moisture, and tumble safely. The calls we see most are a no-heat fault behind F4E3 (heating element open) or F4E1 (heater relay), an exhaust thermistor open F3E1 or inlet thermistor shorted F3E2, a control-board failure F1E1, a communication error F6E2, a stuck keypad F2E1, and the noise, long cycles, or gas no-heat that point to venting, rollers, belts, or the igniter. The Wrinkle Shield option keeps clothes from setting in, and AccuDry moisture sensing ends a cycle at the right dryness, but elements, igniters, thermistors, thermal fuses, belts, and rollers still wear with use.
Our Whirlpool dryer repair process
As an independent, third-party service our experienced technicians begin every Whirlpool dryer repair by confirming the fuel type, then read any code before testing the named part. A no-heat fault sends them to the heating element, the thermal fuse, and the high-limit thermostat on an electric WED — an F4E3 element open or an F4E1 stuck heater relay — or to the igniter, the gas-valve coils, and the flame sensor on a gas WGD, where the igniter is the most common cause. An F3E1 or F3E2 sends them to the exhaust and inlet thermistors and, just as often, to a lint-clogged exhaust duct, because restricted airflow drives many no-heat and long-cycle complaints and is usually a venting problem rather than a part. An F1E1 or F6E2 sends them to the control and UI boards and their ribbon cables, reseated and tested before replacement. We fit genuine OEM parts from trusted parts suppliers, and every visit is backed by a 30-day labor warranty on the workmanship. Most repairs finish in a single trip, and you can book a dryer repair online at any time, with a clear quote before work begins and a total that depends on the diagnosis.
Whirlpool dryer models we service
We service the current US Whirlpool dryer lineup in both fuel types. Electric WED models include the WED4616FW and WED4307SW with Wrinkle Shield and Adaptive Dry, the WED5605MW, the WED6150PW with Steam, the WED4720RW and the smart WED5720RW, and the recent-legacy WED5000DW with AccuDry. Gas WGD models include the WGD4950HW, the WGD5010LW and WGD5050LW with moisture sensing, the WGD5100HW, the stackable WGD5605MW and WGD5620HW, and the smart WGD8127LW with Steam, plus the recent-legacy WGD4815EW. Electric and gas dryers share the same control and sensor faults but differ entirely on the heat side — an electric model has an element and a heater relay, while a gas model has an igniter, gas-valve coils, and a flame sensor — so the technician confirms the fuel type before deciding where the no-heat fault lives. Our model directory lists the heating elements, igniters, gas-valve coils, thermostats, thermal fuses, thermistors, belts, rollers, and control boards matched to each build so the correct genuine OEM part is sourced the first time.
Error codes and diagnostics
Whirlpool dryers are diagnosed by their F#E# codes on electronic models. The verified set includes F1E1 (control-board failure) and F1E3 (motor control unit), F2E1 (stuck keypad) and F2E2 (UI board mismatch), F3E1 (exhaust thermistor open) and F3E2 (inlet thermistor shorted), F4E1 (heater relay) and F4E3 (heating element open, one of the most common dryer codes), and F6E2 and F6E3 (main-to-UI and UI-to-main communication errors). An F4E1 stuck-closed relay and an F1E3 motor fault with the heater running are treated as fire risks and the dryer is stopped at the wall. Several codes will not clear by reset alone — an open element, a shorted thermistor, or a stuck relay re-triggers until the part is replaced — so the technician tests the named part rather than power-cycling repeatedly. Our technicians confirm each code at the named part before fitting anything, and you can look up what each one means on our dryer error-code guides.
Service areas
Our specialist technicians cover all 50 states and the District of Columbia plus 40-plus metro areas, with a standard 24-48 hour response and same-day visits where availability allows. Because so many Whirlpool dryer no-heat and takes-too-long complaints trace to a restricted vent rather than a failed part, an experienced technician often saves you the cost of a needless repair by clearing the airflow path and confirming the thermistor before condemning an element or a board. Every visit is handled by a skilled technician who carries the diagnostic tools and the genuine OEM parts most likely needed, so the fault is identified and, wherever possible, fixed on the first trip. Full specifications and the current dryer lineup are published by the manufacturer at whirlpool.com. Find your area on our service locations page, browse step-by-step help in our repair guides, or book any service through the scheduling page.