LG Dryer D75 Error Code — What It Means
The D75 code tells you the dryer has detected an exhaust-airflow restriction and estimates the duct is about 75 percent clogged or blocked. LG groups D75, D80, D90, and D95 together as vent-restriction codes. On gas models, D80 can also point to insufficient gas supply rather than a vent issue. In practice, the dryer is not moving enough air through the vent system, so hot, humid air stays in the drum longer and the Flow Sense warning bars may light up. LG and third-party service guidance both treat these codes as a venting or airflow problem first, not a control-board fault.
Common Causes
- Lint buildup in the vent path Lint accumulates in the filter housing, rear duct, transition duct, or exterior vent cap and restricts airflow.
- Crushed, kinked, or overly long duct Flexible foil or plastic duct that is twisted, flattened, or runs too far limits exhaust capacity.
- Blocked exterior vent hood Lint, bird nests, leaves, or a stuck damper at the outside termination prevent air from escaping.
- Too many elbows or tight bends A poorly designed exhaust run with multiple turns creates excessive back pressure.
- Insufficient gas supply (gas models) On gas dryers, a D80-type code can indicate low gas pressure or a closed supply valve rather than a vent blockage.
Step-by-Step Fix
- {‘lead’: ‘Confirm the code and Flow Sense bars’, ‘text’: ‘Verify the display shows D75 and check whether the Flow Sense indicator bars are lit on your model.’}
- {‘lead’: ‘Check the lint filter and door area’, ‘text’: ‘Remove the lint screen, clean it, and make sure it seats fully in the housing with no clothing blocking the door seal.’}
- {‘lead’: ‘Test airflow at the outside vent’, ‘text’: ‘Run the dryer and go outside to the termination cap to confirm strong, steady exhaust flow. A weak puff or no air means a blockage somewhere in the line.’}
- {‘lead’: ‘Disconnect and inspect the vent ducting’, ‘text’: ‘Pull the dryer forward, disconnect the transition duct from the dryer outlet, and look inside both the dryer port and the wall duct for visible lint or obstructions.’}
- {‘lead’: ‘Clean the entire vent run and exterior hood’, ‘text’: ‘Use a vent brush or vacuum to remove lint from the transition duct, wall duct, and exterior vent cap. Check the damper moves freely and is not stuck closed.’}
- {‘lead’: ‘Inspect for installation or design issues’, ‘text’: “Measure total duct length, count elbows, and verify the run does not exceed your model’s maximum. Replace crushed or kinked sections with rigid metal duct.”}
- {‘lead’: ‘Perform a power reset’, ‘text’: ‘Unplug the dryer or trip its breaker, wait about five seconds, restore power, close the door firmly, select a cycle, and press Start.’}
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Rigid metal vent duct (4-inch diameter) | Amazon | Replace crushed, kinked, or flexible transition and wall ducts with smooth, rigid metal pipe. |
| Exterior vent hood with damper | Amazon | Install a new hood if the existing damper is stuck, damaged, or heavily clogged with lint. |
| Dryer vent cleaning brush kit | Amazon | Use a long flexible brush to reach deep into wall ducts and remove compacted lint. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a technician if you have cleaned the entire vent system, verified the exterior airflow is strong, checked for installation issues, and the D75 code still appears. On gas dryers, a persistent D80 or D75 code after vent cleaning may indicate a gas-supply problem that requires a qualified gas-appliance technician to inspect the valve, regulator, and supply line. Also call for help if your vent run is inside walls or the roof and you cannot safely access it for cleaning, or if the dryer was recently installed and the duct design may not meet LG’s maximum length and elbow specifications.