How much does Electrolux refrigerator repair cost in Downtown Toronto?
Electrolux refrigerator repair in Downtown Toronto typically runs $190–$470 all-in, depending on the fault. The most common Electrolux call-out is ice maker not working ($260–$420). Every visit starts with a flat $149.95 diagnostic, credited 100% toward your repair, and repairs are backed by a warranty.
- Diagnostic
- $149.95, credited 100% toward your repair
- Warranty
- on parts & workmanship
- Availability
- Same-day & next-day appointments available
Prices in CAD for Downtown Toronto; typical ranges — your exact quote is confirmed on-site before any work. Updated .
Most Electrolux refrigerator faults in Downtown Toronto come down to a handful of parts — and the majority are worth repairing rather than replacing a 10–15 years appliance. Anthony is a Red Seal certified technician who carries the common refrigerator parts on the van, so most Downtown Toronto jobs are diagnosed and fixed in a single visit.
Electrolux Refrigerator repair costs in Downtown Toronto
Honest, all-in ranges for common jobs. Every visit starts with a flat $149.95 diagnostic that is credited 100% toward your repair — so you never pay it twice.
| Problem | Parts | Labour | All-in |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ice maker not working | $90–$280 | $120–$180 | $260–$420 |
| Not cooling | $60–$220 | $120–$200 | $330–$470 |
| Freezer cold but fridge warm | $40–$190 | $130–$210 | $320–$460 |
| Leaking water | $0–$90 | $150–$240 | $190–$300 |
| Frost or ice build-up | $30–$200 | $130–$200 | $310–$450 |
| Water dispenser not working | $20–$160 | $120–$190 | $260–$400 |
| Loud buzzing or humming | $70–$180 | $130–$190 | $280–$370 |
| Running constantly / never shuts off | $0–$190 | $120–$200 | $250–$430 |
| Diagnostic (credited to the repair) | $149.95 |
Ranges are estimates for common Downtown Toronto jobs; your exact quote is confirmed on-site before any work begins. Prices in CAD, updated .
How your repair works
Four simple steps, no surprises.
Book
Call or request a callback. Same-day & next-day appointments available.
Diagnose
A flat $149.95 diagnostic pinpoints the real fault.
Approve
You get an upfront all-in quote first — diagnostic credited 100% toward your repair.
Repaired
Fixed with OEM parts, backed by a 90-day warranty.
Common Electrolux Refrigerator problems & what we check
Tap any problem for the likely causes, what is safe to check yourself, and what it costs.
Ice maker not working
Ice maker not working: The bin is empty, the mould never fills or never harvests; sometimes a faint motor hum with no water.
Also described as: no ice, icemaker stopped, ice maker jammed
Likely causes
- Frozen fill tube or failed water-inlet valve (no water reaching the mould) (Most common)
- Stripped icemaker module gears / failed module (Common)
- Saturated water filter or low line pressure (Occasional)
✔ Safe to check yourself
- Check the water filter age — a clogged filter starves the icemaker; swapping it is owner-doable.
- Confirm the icemaker arm/switch is in the ON/down position.
✖ Leave to a technician
- Don't thaw the fill tube with an open flame or sharp tool; valve replacement is a technician job.
Related: Not cooling · Water dispenser not working
Not cooling Same-day
Not cooling: The compressor hums but the interior is warm, or you hear a fan struggling/iced-up behind the rear freezer panel.
Also described as: fridge warm, not cold enough, temperature rising
Likely causes
- Iced-over evaporator coil from a failed defrost system (heater, thermostat, or control) (Most common)
- Dirty/blocked condenser coils making the compressor overheat and cut out (Common)
- Failed evaporator fan motor (no cold-air circulation to the fridge section) (Common)
- Failed start relay or, less often, a sealed-system/compressor fault (Occasional)
✔ Safe to check yourself
- Pull the fridge out and vacuum the condenser coils (rear or bottom) — dust is the #1 avoidable cause.
- Confirm the temperature dial wasn't bumped and interior vents aren't blocked by food.
- Listen at the back: a clicking every few minutes points to a start-relay fault.
✖ Leave to a technician
- Do not bypass or jump the start relay — risk of compressor damage and shock.
- Do not repeatedly unplug/replug (short-cycling can seize the compressor).
- Any refrigerant ("freon") work is certified-only by federal regulation.
Related: Leaking water · Ice maker not working
Freezer cold but fridge warm Same-day
Freezer cold but fridge warm: The freezer is frozen solid but the refrigerator compartment is warm — the most confusing fridge fault.
Also described as: fridge section warm, freezer fine but fridge not cold, top not cooling
Likely causes
- Iced-over evaporator coil or a failed evaporator fan not pushing cold air up to the fridge section (Most common)
- Stuck or broken air damper between the freezer and fridge (Common)
- Failed defrost system letting frost block airflow (Common)
- Control board or thermistor misreading the fridge temperature (Occasional)
✔ Safe to check yourself
- Check the fridge vents (usually rear or side wall) aren't blocked by food.
- Press the door switch and listen for the evaporator fan — silence often means a failed fan.
- Confirm the freezer is actually holding -18°C.
✖ Leave to a technician
- Don't force or pry a stuck damper — the linkage breaks easily.
- Defrost-system and control-board diagnosis needs a meter and is a technician job.
Related: Not cooling · Frost or ice build-up
Leaking water Same-day
Leaking water: Water pools under the crisper drawers or runs out onto the floor at the front base.
Also described as: water on floor, water under crisper, pooling inside
Likely causes
- Frozen/blocked defrost drain tube (water overflows the trough) (Most common)
- Cracked or clogged drain pan / "duckbill" valve (Common)
- Leaking water-inlet valve or split dispenser line (icemaker/dispenser models) (Occasional)
✔ Safe to check yourself
- Empty and check the drain pan underneath (front kickplate) for cracks or overflow.
- Confirm the unit is level and the door seals close fully.
✖ Leave to a technician
- Do not pour hot water down the drain tube blindly — you can crack the liner; the blockage is usually ice that needs controlled thawing.
- Leave water-valve and sealed-line work to a technician (flooding + electrical risk).
Related: Not cooling · Ice maker not working
Frost or ice build-up
Frost or ice build-up: Frost sheets or ice chunks build on the freezer walls, ceiling, or around the fan — sometimes days after you clear it.
Also described as: ice in freezer, frost on walls, freezer icing up
Likely causes
- Failed defrost system (defrost heater, thermostat/sensor, or timer/control) (Most common)
- Worn or torn door gasket letting humid air in (Common)
- Door left ajar or over-packed, blocking the seal (Occasional)
✔ Safe to check yourself
- Check the door gasket for tears and that it seals fully (a dollar-bill pull test).
- Make sure nothing is propping the door open or blocking it.
- Confirm the freezer isn't set colder than needed.
✖ Leave to a technician
- Don't chip ice off with a knife or screwdriver — you can puncture the coil or liner.
- Defrost-component testing is a technician job.
Related: Not cooling · Freezer cold but fridge warm
Water dispenser not working
Water dispenser not working: The door dispenser gives no water (or only a slow trickle), while ice may or may not still work.
Also described as: no water from door, dispenser dead, slow water
Likely causes
- Frozen water line in the door or freezer (Most common)
- Clogged or overdue water filter (Common)
- Failed water-inlet valve or dispenser switch/actuator (Occasional)
- Low household water pressure or a kinked supply line (Occasional)
✔ Safe to check yourself
- Change the water filter if it's over 6 months old — the most common fix and fully owner-doable.
- Check the supply line behind the fridge isn't kinked and the shut-off valve is open.
- Confirm the dispenser lock isn't switched on.
✖ Leave to a technician
- Thawing a frozen door line and replacing the inlet valve are technician jobs (water + electrical).
Related: Ice maker not working · Leaking water
Loud buzzing or humming
Loud buzzing or humming: A loud hum or buzz from the back (condenser fan/compressor) or a fan-blade-hitting-ice sound from the freezer.
Also described as: loud noise, vibrating, rattling, grinding
Likely causes
- Failing condenser fan motor bearings (Most common)
- Evaporator fan blade striking frost build-up (Common)
- Worn compressor mounting grommets (Occasional)
✔ Safe to check yourself
- Vacuum the condenser area; confirm the unit is level and not touching cabinetry.
✖ Leave to a technician
- Don't open the sealed compressor area; fan-motor replacement is a technician job.
Related: Not cooling · Frost or ice build-up
Running constantly / never shuts off
Running constantly / never shuts off: The fridge runs continuously and never cycles off, often with a warmer-than-usual back and higher energy use.
Also described as: compressor never stops, runs all the time, high energy bill
Likely causes
- Dirty condenser coils making the compressor work to hold temperature (Most common)
- Worn or torn door gasket leaking cold air (Common)
- Failed defrost system or a frosted coil reducing efficiency (Common)
- Faulty thermostat/thermistor or control board (Occasional)
✔ Safe to check yourself
- Vacuum the condenser coils — the single most common and avoidable cause.
- Check the door gaskets seal and the doors close fully.
- Give it 2" clearance and keep it out of direct sun / away from the oven.
✖ Leave to a technician
- Thermostat/control and sealed-system diagnosis are technician jobs.
Related: Not cooling · Frost or ice build-up
Electrolux refrigerator parts we stock
Electrolux-branded French-door fridges (EW/EI series, ~2009-2014) are remembered in the trade for one thing: the motor-driven auger ice-maker system, a multi-component design whose repeated failures generated years of service campaigns and revised parts (the bottom-mount ice-maker kit alone supersedes several earlier numbers). Later Electrolux units share the modern Frigidaire NA platform and behave like premium Gallery units, throwing the same readable SY-codes (SY EF = evaporator-fan; SY CE / SY CF = UI-to-main-board communication) and using the same 134/137/5303/242-prefix parts book.
Signature Electrolux faults
- Motor-driven auger ice-maker assembly failures (EW/EI era) — no ice / leak into bucket; often several revised parts deep (signature (2009-2014))
- Evaporator-fan / SY EF faults (shared Frigidaire platform) — freezer fine, fridge warms; SY EF on display (common)
- No-fill water inlet valve (ice maker cycles but stays empty) — ice maker runs but never makes ice; dispenser weak (common)
- Defrost-system / drain icing — iced evaporator or ice slab on freezer floor; cabinet warms (common)
- Door-gasket and hinge wear on heavy counter-depth doors — frost lines at the gasket, condensation at the mullion (occasional)
| Part | OEM number | Price band |
|---|---|---|
| Water inlet valve (triple-solenoid) | 242252702 | $130-$220 |
| Ice-maker assembly (French-door bottom-mount kit) | 5303918493 | $200-$320 |
| Evaporator fan motor kit | 5303918549 | $80-$150 |
| Defrost heater assembly | 242044113 | $70-$130 |
| Water filter PureAdvantage Ultra | EWF02 | $45-$65 |
Error codes we see on Electrolux refrigerators
- SY EF
- evaporator (freezer) fan circuit failure - fan not turning; freezer-fine/fridge-warm verdict
- SY CE
- UI-to-main-board communication error after run time (not a fan or ice-maker fault)
- SY CF
- UI-to-main-board communication failure on start-up (UI and main board can't initialize)
- OP
- temperature sensor open (per zone - FF or freezer display)
- SH
- temperature sensor shorted (per zone - FF or freezer display)
Why homeowners across Downtown Toronto call us
Repairs are carried out by Anthony, a Red Seal interprovincial journeyman who is 313A Licensed, TSSA Certified, ODP Certified — backed by $2,000,000+ general liability insurance and a 90-day workmanship warranty on every job.
Red Seal technician
Work done by Anthony, a certified journeyman — not a rotating subcontractor.
Licensed & gas-certified
313A refrigeration licence and TSSA gas certification for safe, code-correct repairs.
$2,000,000+ insured
Fully insured for general liability, so your home is protected during the repair.
90-day warranty
Parts and workmanship are warrantied — if it's not right, we come back.
OEM parts on the van
Common parts are stocked, so most jobs are completed on the first visit.
Upfront pricing
A flat $149.95 diagnostic, credited 100% toward your repair, and a quote before any work.
What our credentials mean for you
- Red Seal Certified
- The interprovincial standard for skilled trades — a journeyman who passed the national appliance-service exam.
- 313A Licensed
- Ontario's refrigeration & air-conditioning systems mechanic licence — legally required to work on sealed cooling systems.
- TSSA Certified
- Technical Standards & Safety Authority gas certification — qualified to work safely on gas appliances.
- ODP Certified
- Ozone Depletion Prevention certification — licensed to handle refrigerants responsibly and to code.
Repair or replace your refrigerator?
A simple rule of thumb: if the repair costs more than half the price of a comparable new unit and the appliance is near the end of its life, replacement may make more sense.
A refrigerator typically lasts – and costs $1,400–$2,800 to replace — so most faults under about $450 are worth fixing. We'll always tell you honestly when a repair isn't worth your money.
Keep your refrigerator running
Simple habits that prevent the most common Downtown Toronto repairs.
- Vacuum the condenser coils once a year — the single biggest cause of avoidable repairs.
- Keep a 2-inch gap behind and above the fridge so it can shed heat.
- Change the water filter every 6 months to protect the icemaker and dispenser.
- Check the door gaskets seal fully; replace them as soon as they tear or harden.
- Keep the freezer at -18°C and don't block the interior vents with food.
- Clear the defrost drain once a year to prevent leaks.
Servicing Refrigerators across Downtown Toronto
Homes here: Downtown Toronto is the dense core of Old Toronto, and it splits hard between two kinds of kitchens. On one side is a wall of high-rise condo towers — CityPlace built from the late 1990s through the early 2010s on the former CN railway lands, the King West and Entertainment District glass towers, the Yonge corridor and the Financial District fringe — almost all running tight galley kitchens with counter-depth and panel-ready appliances, where the service-elevator and loading-dock booking can govern the visit as much as the fault. On the other side is some of the oldest heritage housing in the country: Cabbagetown's bay-and-gable Victorian semis and rowhouses (largest continuous preserved Victorian area in North America, most built before WWI), The Annex's big 1880s–1900s Victorian and Edwardian brick homes (many cut up into apartments and rooming houses), Kensington's narrow Victorian rowhouses, and St. Lawrence's converted Front Street warehouse lofts alongside its 1970s–80s mixed rowhouse and co-op redevelopment. The heritage stock means tight basements, narrow stairs and original wiring; the towers mean closets, condos and dock bookings.
Parts & timing: Common parts are typically same-day from our Toronto channels; the downtown core is central, so the limiter on a tower call is usually the service-elevator and dock window rather than the part, and heritage-side calls in the Annex, Cabbagetown and St. Lawrence are usually same- or next-day.
Water & disposal: Downtown Toronto is part of the City of Toronto, so the same municipal water supply and appliance disposal rules apply — see appliance repair in Toronto for the full water profile and disposal details.
Coverage: We cover Downtown Toronto end to end — the Financial District, King West, CityPlace, St. Lawrence, The Annex, Cabbagetown, Kensington Market, Harbourfront and the Distillery District.
Towers & condos: Downtown access is two jobs in one district. The condo towers — CityPlace, King West, the Yonge corridor, the Financial District fringe, Harbourfront — book a service elevator and loading dock and often need a concierge or security sign-in, so those calls land in scheduled windows with a long carry from the dock. The heritage side is the opposite challenge: Cabbagetown, The Annex, Kensington and St. Lawrence's narrow streets have no driveway, permit-only or metered street parking, narrow front stairs and tight low basements, so the constraint there is parking and getting the appliance up or down a steep, narrow staircase rather than a building booking.
More appliance repair in Downtown Toronto
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Frequently asked questions
Why is my ice maker not working?
Why is my fridge not cooling?
Why is my freezer cold but the fridge warm?
Why is my fridge leaking water?
Why is my freezer building up frost?
Why is my water dispenser not working?
Why is my fridge buzzing or humming loudly?
Why does my fridge run constantly?
Do you charge for the diagnostic?
How soon can you come out?
Are you licensed and insured?
Do you use genuine parts?
Do you service Electrolux refrigerators?
Need your Electrolux refrigerator fixed in Downtown Toronto?
Same-day & next-day appointments available. Flat $149.95 diagnostic, credited 100% toward your repair, and a 90-day warranty on every repair.
Call (647) 490-7878