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KitchenAid Refrigerator Not Cooling - Causes & Fix

3 min read
⚡ Quick Answer

Dirty condenser coils are the most common cause. Clean the coils at the rear or base, then check evaporator and condenser fan operation.

Difficulty Intermediate (DIY)
Est. time 15-60 min
Tools Multimeter , nut driver, screwdrivers

KitchenAid Refrigerator Not Cooling — What’s Happening

When a KitchenAid refrigerator fails to cool, it means the cabinet temperature is not dropping to the setpoint. This is a symptom, not a single fault code. KitchenAid service diagnostics break the problem into component checks for the compressor, evaporator fan, condenser fan, damper airflow, and thermistors. On some models the control will display active ice-maker error codes such as E1 for no cooling, or model-specific faults like F6 E1 or F8 E1, but most no-cooling complaints do not show any code at all.

The failure can affect both compartments, only the fresh-food section, or only the freezer, depending on which part of the sealed system or air-delivery path has failed. The majority of cases trace back to airflow blockage, dirty heat-exchange surfaces, or fan and sensor faults rather than compressor or refrigerant loss.

Jump to Fix

Most Likely Causes

How to Diagnose and Fix

  1. Verify which compartments are warm and check the display for any active error codes such as E1, F6 E1, or F8 E1.
  2. Enter service diagnostics if your model supports it and run the cooling component tests for compressor, evaporator fan, condenser fan, damper, and thermistor.
  3. Check evaporator fan operation by listening at the interior rear wall or opening the evaporator cover to confirm the fan spins and air moves through the vents.
  4. Inspect the evaporator coil for heavy frost or ice buildup and follow the defrost-system diagnostic branch if the coil is blocked.
  5. Clean the condenser coils at the rear or underneath the unit and confirm the condenser fan is running when the compressor is on.
  6. Test the compressor start relay and start capacitor if the compressor will not start or clicks off immediately.
  7. Measure thermistor resistance or observe live temperature readings in diagnostics to confirm sensors are reporting correctly.
  8. If airflow, fans, sensors, and start components all test good but the system still will not cool, a sealed-system leak or compressor fault is likely and requires licensed refrigeration service.

Parts You Might Need

PartNotes
Evaporator fan motorAmazon | Moves cold air from the evaporator into the cabinet.
Condenser fan motorAmazon | Cools the compressor and condenser coils.
Thermistor (temperature sensor)Amazon | Reports cabinet temperature to the control board.
Compressor start relay and start capacitorAmazon | Required to start the compressor on most models.

If your appliance also shows a code on the display, these match this problem:

When to Call a Pro

Call a professional if the compressor will not start after replacing the relay and capacitor, if you find refrigerant oil residue or hear hissing that suggests a sealed-system leak, or if diagnostics point to a failed compressor. Sealed-system work requires evacuation, leak repair, and recharge by a licensed technician. Also call for help if frost buildup returns immediately after manual defrost, since that usually means a defrost-timer or adaptive-defrost control fault that needs board-level diagnosis.


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