Fridge Not Cooling? Top Causes, Fixes & Repair Costs
Field Diagnostic Guide

Fridge Not Cooling?

The light's on, you can hear a faint hum — but nothing inside is cold. Here's how a technician actually diagnoses it, in order.

20+ years on the tools Homes & commercial kitchens

You open the fridge for the morning milk and it's warm. The light's on, you can hear a faint hum, but nothing inside is cold. It's a gut-drop moment — and usually it hits on the hottest day of the year, with a full week's groceries at stake.

I've spent more than 20 years repairing refrigerators in homes and commercial kitchens, and a fridge not cooling is easily the most common call I get. The good news: in my experience, roughly half of these faults are things you can check, and sometimes fix, yourself in under 30 minutes.

In this guide I'll walk you through the warning signs, every common cause of a refrigerator temperature issue, safe step-by-step DIY fixes, honest repair cost ranges, and exactly when it's smarter to call a licensed technician. Let's get your fridge cold again.

Symptoms

What are the common signs your fridge isn't cooling properly?

The clearest sign is warm food and drinks despite the fridge appearing to run. But a refrigerator temperature issue often shows up in subtler ways first, and catching them early saves both food and money.

Watch for these warning signs:

  • Food spoils faster than usual — milk turns, leftovers go off a day or two early.
  • The interior feels lukewarm even after the door's been shut for hours.
  • Condensation or sweating on shelves, walls, or the door gasket.
  • The compressor runs constantly and never seems to cycle off.
  • Frost building up on the back wall or around the freezer vents.
  • A warm freezer as well — or the opposite, a cold freezer but a warm fridge.
  • New or louder noises: clicking, buzzing, or humming that wasn't there before.
3–4°C
Safe fridge temperature

A healthy fridge holds 3–4°C (37–40°F); the freezer sits at −18°C (0°F). Above 40°F, bacteria multiply fast — the food-safety rule I've worked to for two decades is a strict two-hour limit before perishables should be tossed.

One more field tip: don't panic at the first sign of warmth. I've been called out to plenty of fridges that were simply overloaded after a big grocery run, or knocked to the wrong setting during a clean. Run through the checks below before assuming something's broken.

Diagnosis · cheapest fix first

What are the top causes of a refrigerator not cooling?

A refrigerator that won't cool almost always traces back to one of nine culprits. I check them in this order in the field — easiest and cheapest first, most expensive last. Work through them the same way and you'll save yourself a call-out fee more often than not.

01

Dirty condenser coils

DIYMost commonLow cost

Dirty condenser coils are the single most common cause I see, and the easiest to fix. These coils sit behind or underneath your fridge and release heat pulled from inside the cabinet. When they're caked in dust, pet hair, and kitchen grease, they can't shed that heat, so the fridge struggles to cool no matter how hard it works.

In dusty homes or houses with pets, I've seen coils so clogged they looked like grey felt. Cleaning them every 6–12 months can improve efficiency by up to 30% and is the first thing I'd have you check.

02

Faulty door seal

DIYCommonLow cost

A faulty door seal lets warm room air leak straight into the cabinet, forcing the fridge to run non-stop while never reaching temperature. The rubber gasket around the door is meant to form an airtight seal, and over the years it hardens, tears, or warps.

Here's a trick I use on every service call: close a banknote or sheet of paper in the door. If it slides out with no resistance, the seal has failed. You'll often spot sweating or ice near a leaky gasket too.

03

Blocked air vents

DIYFree fix

Blocked air vents stop cold air moving from the freezer into the fridge compartment, which is why one side ends up warm while the other stays cold. In most modern fridges, cold air is generated in the freezer and pushed through small vents into the fresh-food section.

Shove a cereal box or a tall bottle against those vents and you choke the airflow. I've reversed plenty of "broken" fridges just by rearranging groceries so the vents can breathe.

04

Overloaded fridge

DIYFree fix

An overloaded fridge restricts internal air circulation, creating warm pockets even when the unit is running correctly. Cold air needs room to move around your food to keep everything at temperature.

Pack the shelves wall-to-wall — as many of us do after a big shop — and you trap the cold in one spot. Ironically, a fridge that's too empty struggles too, because there's little cold mass to hold temperature when you open the door. Aim for comfortably full, not jammed.

05

Thermostat malfunction

DIY checkMid cost

A thermostat malfunction means the fridge either never gets the signal to cool or shuts off far too early. The thermostat — or temperature control board on newer models — tells the compressor when to run based on the internal temperature.

I've had customers accidentally knock the dial to a warmer setting during a clean-out, so always check that first. If the dial is set correctly but the fridge still won't cool, the thermostat itself may have failed and need replacing.

06

Defective fan motor

Pro repairMid cost

A defective fan motor stops cold air from circulating, which almost always leaves the fridge warm while the freezer stays cold. Most fridges have two fans: the evaporator fan that moves cold air through the compartments, and the condenser fan that cools the coils.

If you open the fridge and don't hear the gentle whir of the evaporator fan, that's a strong clue. In my experience a seized or noisy fan motor is one of the more common failures on fridges past the seven-year mark.

07

Evaporator coil freeze-up

DIY defrostMid cost

An evaporator coil freeze-up happens when frost builds into a solid block over the coils and blocks airflow completely. Behind the panel in your freezer sits the evaporator coil, where the actual cooling happens. A working defrost system melts frost off it a few times a day.

When the defrost heater, timer, or sensor fails, ice keeps accumulating until it chokes the coil. The tell-tale sign is a fridge that cools fine for a day after you unplug it, then warms up again as the ice rebuilds.

08

Power supply problem

DIYFree–low

A power supply problem can leave your fridge half-working or dead, and it's worth ruling out before assuming the worst. A tripped circuit, a faulty outlet, a damaged cord, or even a loose plug can cut or reduce power to the unit.

I always plug a lamp or phone charger into the same outlet to confirm it's live. Fridges also need stable voltage — running one off a lightweight extension lead is a mistake I see constantly, and it can starve the compressor of power.

09

Compressor failure

Pro onlyHigh costLeast common

Compressor failure is the most serious cause, and thankfully the least common — but when the compressor dies, the fridge can't cool at all. The compressor is the heart of the system, pumping refrigerant through the coils. When it fails, you'll often hear it click on and immediately off (an overload trip), or hear nothing while the unit stays silent and warm.

Safety note Compressor and refrigerant work is not a DIY job. Refrigerant handling legally requires a licensed, certified technician in Australia (and EPA certification in the US). Don't attempt to open the sealed system yourself.
Do it yourself

Step-by-step DIY fixes for a fridge not cooling

Before you call anyone, work through these safe, no-special-tools checks in order.

Before you start Always unplug the fridge before touching coils, fans, or internal panels — there's live electricity inside, and it's not worth the risk.
  1. Check the power. Confirm the plug is firmly in, the cord isn't damaged, and the outlet is live. Reset the circuit breaker if it's tripped, and skip the extension lead.
  2. Check the temperature dial. Make sure it hasn't been bumped to a warmer setting. Set the fridge to around 37°F (3°C) and give it a few hours.
  3. Rearrange the contents. Pull items away from the rear vents, clear any boxes blocking airflow, and make sure you're not overloaded. Leave room for air to circulate.
  4. Test the door seal. Do the banknote test all around the door. Clean the gasket with warm soapy water — grime alone can stop it sealing. Replace it if it's cracked or won't grip.
  5. Clean the condenser coils. Unplug the unit, locate the coils (usually at the back or behind a bottom kick-plate), and vacuum them thoroughly. This alone fixes a surprising number of cases.
  6. Listen for the fans. With the fridge running, listen for the evaporator fan inside and the condenser fan below. Silence points to a failed motor.
  7. Try a full defrost. If you suspect a coil freeze-up, empty the fridge, unplug it, and leave the doors open for 24 hours to melt all the ice. If it cools well afterward but fails again in a day or two, the defrost system needs a professional.
  8. Give it time after moving. If you've just relocated or reinstalled the fridge, let it stand upright for 4 hours before switching on, then allow 24 hours to reach full temperature.

If you've worked through all eight steps and the fridge still won't cool, the fault is likely internal — a control board, sensor, fan motor, or the sealed system — and it's time to bring in a technician.

Know the line

When should you call a professional vs. DIY?

Call a professional the moment the fault involves refrigerant, the compressor, or internal electrical components — these require licensed expertise and specialised tools. DIY is perfectly fine for cleaning, airflow, seals, and power checks. Knowing where that line sits keeps you safe and saves money.

Handle it yourself
  • Cleaning condenser coils and door gaskets
  • Rearranging food and clearing vents
  • Checking power, plugs, and breakers
  • Adjusting the thermostat dial
  • Defrosting a frozen-up coil
Call a licensed technician
  • Any suspected compressor failure or refrigerant leak
  • Replacing fan motors, defrost heaters, thermostats, or control boards
  • Sealed-system repairs of any kind
  • Persistent faults after you've done the basics
  • A fridge under warranty (DIY can void it)

In my 20 years on the tools, the customers who spend the least are the ones who do the simple checks first and then call promptly when they hit something internal — rather than pulling the whole fridge apart and turning a $200 fix into a $500 one.

Fault pattern

Fridge not cooling but freezer is cold (and vice versa)

If the freezer is cold but the fridge is warm, the problem is almost always airflow or defrost — not the compressor. This is one of the most misdiagnosed patterns I see, and the fix is usually cheaper than people fear.

Freezer works, fridge is warm — suspect in order:
  • A defective fan motor (evaporator fan) not pushing cold air into the fridge section.
  • Blocked air vents between the freezer and fridge, often from packed food.
  • An evaporator coil freeze-up choking airflow behind the freezer panel.
  • A failed damper — the little flap that controls how much cold air enters the fridge.

When the fridge cools but the freezer is warm, you're more likely looking at a refrigerant issue, a failing compressor, or a condenser fan problem — and that leans toward a professional visit.

The takeaway: one compartment cold and the other warm rarely means a dead fridge. It usually means air isn't moving where it should, which is often a repairable part rather than a full replacement.

Repair costs · AUD

What are the repair cost expectations?

Repair costs for a fridge that isn't cooling range from a simple part swap to a major sealed-system job. Prices vary by brand, region, and how old the unit is, so treat these as ballpark AUD ranges rather than fixed quotes.

Condenser coil clean / door seal replacement$100–$250
Thermostat or temperature sensor$150–$350
Evaporator or condenser fan motor$200–$450
Defrost heater / timer / control board$250–$500
Compressor replacement$600–$1,200+
My honest rule of thumb: if the repair costs more than half the price of a comparable new fridge, and the unit is over 10 years old, replacement is usually the smarter money. A diagnostic call-out typically runs $80–$150 — often credited toward the repair if you go ahead.
Brand notes

Brand-specific fridge cooling notes

Different brands fail in different ways. Here's what I see most often across three common makes.

Samsung

Samsung fridge not cooling

Samsung fridges — especially French-door and side-by-side models — are notorious for evaporator coil freeze-up caused by defrost sensor or drainage faults. If your Samsung is not cooling but the freezer is fine, a frozen evaporator coil is the prime suspect. A "forced defrost" mode (check your model's button combination) can confirm it, but a recurring freeze-up needs the defrost system properly diagnosed.

Whirlpool

Whirlpool fridge cooling problems

Whirlpool cooling faults often come down to the thermostat/control board or the evaporator fan motor. A common pattern is a fridge that runs constantly but never gets cold, pointing to a control issue rather than the compressor. Whirlpool condenser coils also clog quickly in dusty homes, so I always clean those first before condemning anything internal.

Kelvinator

Kelvinator fridge cooling issues

Kelvinator fridges, common across many Aussie homes, tend to show their age through worn door seals and dirty condenser coils. On older Kelvinators, a failing start relay on the compressor is also worth checking. Because many are well past a decade in service, I always weigh repair cost against the value of the unit before recommending major parts.

Prevention

What preventive maintenance avoids future cooling failures?

Most cooling failures are preventable with a few simple habits. In my experience, fridges that get basic yearly attention easily outlast the ones that don't — often by years.

  • Clean the condenser coils every 6–12 months — the single best thing you can do.
  • Check and clean the door seals a few times a year; replace them the moment they harden or tear.
  • Leave breathing room around the fridge (at least 5cm at the back and sides) so heat can escape.
  • Don't overload the shelves or block the internal vents.
  • Set the right temperature: 37–40°F (3–4°C) for the fridge, 0°F (−18°C) for the freezer.
  • Avoid putting hot food straight in — let it cool first so the compressor isn't overworked.
  • Keep it reasonably full but not packed, so there's enough cold mass to hold temperature.
  • Listen to your fridge — new noises are early warnings worth acting on.
Safety reminder Always unplug the unit before cleaning coils or handling any internal component. Leave anything involving refrigerant or the compressor to a licensed technician.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Q

How do you fix a refrigerator that is not cooling?

Start by cleaning the condenser coils, checking the door seal, clearing blocked vents, and confirming the thermostat setting. These four fixes resolve most cooling problems. If the fridge still won't cool after that, the fault is likely an internal fan motor, defrost system, or compressor issue that needs a professional.
Q

What would cause my fridge to not be cold?

The most common causes are dirty condenser coils, a faulty door seal, blocked air vents, an overloaded fridge, or a thermostat malfunction. Less common but more serious causes include a defective fan motor, an evaporator coil freeze-up, a power supply problem, or compressor failure requiring a licensed technician.
Q

What are signs of a failing fridge compressor?

A failing compressor often clicks on and immediately off, stays silent while the fridge runs warm, or feels unusually hot to the touch. You may also hear loud buzzing or rattling. Because compressor and refrigerant work requires certification, confirm the diagnosis with a licensed technician before deciding on repair or replacement.
Q

How do you reset a refrigerator compressor?

Unplug the fridge from the wall, wait 5–10 minutes to let the compressor and control board fully reset, then plug it back in. This power-cycle clears many electronic glitches and overload trips. If the compressor still won't run or trips off repeatedly, the fault is internal and needs a professional diagnosis.
People also search for

Related fridge cooling issues you might be searching for

If you're troubleshooting, you may also be looking into any of these. Each usually traces back to one of the nine causes above — so start with the simple checks first.

Samsung fridge not cooling Fridge not cooling but lights on Fridge not cold but freezer is Fridge not cooling and making noise New fridge not cooling Repair cost concerns Kelvinator fridge issues Whirlpool fridge issues
Get it sorted

Get your fridge cold again

A fridge not cooling is stressful, but it's rarely a mystery. Nine times out of ten it comes down to dirty coils, a worn seal, blocked airflow, a defrost fault, or a thermostat setting — and many of those you can sort yourself in an afternoon. Work through the checklist in order, from power and airflow to coils and seals, before assuming the worst.

If you've done the basics and your fridge still won't cool, don't let good food spoil — the sealed system and compressor need a licensed technician.

Ready for a proper diagnosis?

Book a qualified technician at Fridge Experts

We'll get your fridge running cold again — fast, with an honest diagnosis and no upsell.

0404 705 914
info@fridgerepairexperts.com.au 75 Cook Parade, St Clair NSW 2759

This guide is general information based on field experience and isn't a substitute for professional service. Always unplug your fridge before inspecting internal components. Compressor, refrigerant, and sealed-system repairs must be carried out by a licensed technician — attempting refrigerant work without the correct certification is unsafe and illegal in Australia. Repair costs are indicative AUD ranges and vary by brand, model, and region.