By Area Guide

Common Appliance Problems in Mississauga Homes

Mississauga packs in nearly every kind of home — the older village cores of Port Credit and Streetsville, the 1980s and '90s subdivisions of Erin Mills and Meadowvale, and the condo towers around Square One. The appliance that breaks depends a lot on which you're in.

These are the calls we get most across the city.

Subdivision homes hitting the wear years

Appliances installed when Erin Mills and Meadowvale homes were built are now at the age where parts wear out. Washers and dryers need pumps, belts, and bearings; full-size fridges lose cooling as fans and coils age.

  • Washer not spinning or draining
  • Dryer not heating or taking too long
  • Fridge cooling weakly — fan or coils
  • Oven element or igniter failure

Square One condos and built-in kitchens

Around Cooksville and Square One it's compact and built-in appliances in tight condo kitchens — panel-ready dishwashers, apartment-size fridges, and stacked laundry. Access and a clean repair matter as much as the part.

  • Built-in dishwasher not draining or leaking
  • Compact fridge running constantly
  • Stacked washer-dryer not spinning
  • Cooktop or built-in oven electronic faults

Before you book

Vacuum the fridge coils, clear the washer's drain-pump filter, and check the dryer vent. Note any error code and model number for built-in units. A returning fault needs the right replacement part.

Rather have a pro handle it?

Our technicians repair this across Toronto and the GTA — same-day in many cases, with clear pricing and a warranty on the work.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do you cover both Mississauga subdivisions and Square One condos?+
Yes. We bring parts for full-size household appliances and for the compact, built-in units in condo kitchens, so most Mississauga visits are a single trip.
My subdivision appliances are all about the same age — what fails first?+
Usually the hardest-working ones: washers and dryers tend to need wear parts before the fridge or range. A quick diagnosis tells you whether it's a worthwhile fix.