Fridge Not Cooling? 6 Things to Check Before Calling a Technician
A fridge that stops cooling is one of the most stressful appliance failures, especially in Fort Mac where replacement units take days to arrive from Edmonton. Before you panic and call us, work through these 6 quick checks. About 1 in 3 fridge not cooling calls turn out to be something the homeowner could resolve in 5 minutes. Save yourself the service call where possible.
Check 1: Is it actually plugged in and getting power?
Sounds obvious. We have done service calls in Fort Mac where the breaker tripped and the homeowner did not realize it. Check that the interior light comes on when you open the door. If no light, check the breaker panel. If the breaker is fine but no light, test the outlet with a lamp or phone charger.
Also check the cord. Pets, kids, or recent moving of the fridge can dislodge or damage the plug. Surprisingly common in Fort Mac homes that were rebuilt post-wildfire because outlet positions sometimes shifted slightly during reconstruction.
Check 2: Is the temperature dial set correctly?
Inside the fridge, the temperature controls (dial or digital display) may have been bumped to the warmest setting accidentally. Some units have separate fridge and freezer controls. Make sure both are set in the middle of their range or cooler.
Newer fridges with digital displays sometimes show error codes after a power outage (Fort Mac does occasionally have outages during winter storms). Check the manual or look up the model online for reset procedures.
Check 3: Are the vents inside the fridge blocked?
Cold air enters the fridge compartment through vents (usually at the back). If you have a packed fridge with food blocking these vents, cold air cannot circulate. The fridge feels warm at the front even though the back is cold.
Fort Mac shift-worker households often run very full fridges (stocking up before/after rotations). Move food away from the back wall, leave a few inches of clear space around vents. Wait 30-60 minutes. If temperature stabilizes, you found the problem.
Check 4: Are the condenser coils dirty?
The condenser coils are usually at the back or underneath the fridge. They release heat from the cooling system. If they are caked with dust, pet hair, and lint (very common in Fort Mac homes with dogs and the dry winter air drawing dust), the system cannot release heat properly.
Unplug the fridge. Pull it out from the wall. Use a vacuum with a brush attachment to clean the coils. The single most effective DIY maintenance you can do. Recommended once a year. Often resolves not cooling well complaints completely.
Check 5: Is the door seal failing?
Run a dollar bill or piece of paper between the door seal and the fridge body. Close the door. Try to pull the bill out. If it slides out easily, your seal is leaking warm air in.
Check the seal visually for cracks, tears, or hardened spots. Failing seals are extra common on heavily-used Fort Mac fridges where the door opens dozens of times per day. Replacement seals cost $50-200 and most homeowners can install them with a screwdriver. We can do it for $250-400 if you prefer.
Check 6: Is the freezer working but the fridge is not?
If the freezer is fine but the fridge compartment is warm, the failure is usually one of two things: the defrost system has failed (frost buildup blocking airflow) or the evaporator fan motor has failed (no air moving to the fridge compartment).
Both require a technician. Diagnostic + repair typically runs $300-500 in Fort Mac. This is one of the most repairable fridge problems, worth doing on units under 10 years old.
When you definitely need a technician
If you have worked through the 6 checks and the fridge still is not cooling, time to call. Tell us what you tried and observed. That helps us bring the right parts on the diagnostic visit, often saving a follow-up trip (which matters more in Fort Mac than other cities because of the parts logistics).
Indicators of serious failure (compressor or refrigerant): fridge silent (no humming), warm air blowing into the fridge, oily residue near the back of the fridge, hissing or gurgling sounds. These usually mean replacement is more economical than repair on units over 8 years old.
How to handle food while waiting
If the fridge is warm, transfer perishables to coolers with ice. Eat the most spoilable items first. Frozen food in a closed freezer can stay safe for 24-48 hours if you do not open the door.
Track what spoils. Most home insurance policies cover food spoilage from appliance failure (typically $250-500 limit), but you need receipts and a list to claim. Take photos of spoiled food before throwing it out. Fort Mac food costs are higher than the national average, so claims can add up.
Worked through the checks and still not cooling?
Call us with what you tried and what you observed. We will bring the right diagnostic tools and likely parts so we can usually fix it in one visit (saving on the parts shipping wait).
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