Whirlpool Washer Tub Bearing Replacement — What This Part Does
The tub bearing supports the inner basket shaft and allows the drum to spin smoothly inside the outer tub. Over time, the shaft seal can fail and let water reach the bearing, causing rust and wear. Age, heavy loads, and chronic imbalance also stress the bearing assembly.
When the bearing wears out, the basket no longer spins quietly or stays centered. You will hear grinding or roaring noises during spin cycles, and the basket may have noticeable play or wobble when you move it by hand. If the shaft itself is pitted or corroded, the bearing replacement may require additional parts or a complete basket/tub assembly instead of just the bearing and seal.
Signs It Needs Replacing
- Loud roaring or howling noise during spin A deep grinding or roaring sound that gets worse at higher spin speeds points directly to worn bearings.
- Basket wobbles or has excessive play When you rock the drum by hand, roughness or side-to-side movement means the bearing is failing.
- Water leaking from under the washer or around the tub seal A leaking shaft seal lets water damage the bearings and often leaves rust stains or moisture around the rear tub area.
- Rust or corrosion visible around the tub shaft Corroded metal around the bearing housing or on the shaft itself confirms that water intrusion has reached the bearing.
- Basket rotates roughly or binds If the drum turns with a rough, grinding feel instead of smoothly, the bearing races are worn or corroded.
- Secondary error codes for imbalance or speed sensing Imbalance or motor-speed faults can appear when a worn bearing allows excessive basket movement, though these are not bearing-specific codes.
How to Replace It
- Unplug the washer and shut off the water supply before beginning any work.
- Remove the cabinet panels or top/front access covers to reach the tub assembly, following your model’s disassembly sequence.
- Disconnect the drive components including belt, motor, rotor/stator, brake assembly, shocks, and suspension springs as needed to access the tub.
- Separate the inner basket from the outer tub by removing the basket hub or spanner nut, then lift or slide the basket and shaft free.
- Inspect the shaft for pitting, grooves, or corrosion; replace the shaft if damaged or seized to the bearing.
- Press or drive out the old bearing using the outer race for support, then remove the old shaft seal from the outer tub.
- Install the new bearing by pressing evenly on the outer race only, seat the new shaft seal squarely in the bore, and apply light lubrication to the seal lip.
- Reassemble the basket onto the shaft, reconnect all drive parts, suspension, and cabinet panels, then run a test cycle to confirm smooth rotation and no leaks.
- Check for abnormal noise, wobble, or water leakage during spin to verify the repair is complete.
The Part You Need
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Whirlpool Washer Tub Bearing and Seal Kit | Amazon | Locate your exact model and serial number on the washer’s interior door frame or back panel to match the correct bearing and seal kit for your platform (Cabrio, Bravos, or other). |
Related Error Codes
If this part is failing you may also see one of these codes:
- Whirlpool Washer Drn error code
- Whirlpool Washer F02 error code
- Whirlpool Washer F0E1 error code
- Whirlpool Washer F1E1 error code
- Whirlpool Washer F1E2 error code
- Whirlpool Washer F20 error code
- Whirlpool Washer F21 error code
- Whirlpool Washer F2E1 error code
- Whirlpool Washer F3E1 error code
- Whirlpool Washer F3E2 error code
When to Call a Pro
Bearing replacement requires full tub disassembly, special pressing tools, and careful attention to the shaft condition. If the shaft is seized, pitted, or corroded, you may need to replace the entire basket/tub assembly or gearcase platform rather than just the bearing. On many Whirlpool top-load models, the bearing is integrated into the gearcase or platform, making the repair more complex than a simple bearing swap. If you lack the tools to press bearings, safely support the tub during disassembly, or properly diagnose shaft damage, call a professional to avoid damaging the tub or ordering the wrong parts.