Why Is My Washer Dryer Not Heating on Dry Cycle?
If the washer dryer enters a drying program but never gets warm, the cause may be the heating element, thermostat, thermal protection, airflow problem, or a control issue preventing the heater from energising.
Get a Confirmed Fit spare part
At Spares2Repair, when a spare part is matched to your exact model number we call that Confirmed Fit. Because spare parts can vary across production runs, sizes, and revisions, Confirmed Fit is the safest route to reduce wrong-part orders and buy with more confidence.
Start with the search box whenever you have the full model number. Use Fixit Fox Finder if the rating plate is hard to read or you want guided help before ordering. Ordering by appearance alone is more likely to lead to the wrong part.
Browse Washer Dryer spare partsWhat Confirmed Fit meansContact customer service
Before you order, use Confirmed Fit
For advice and repair topics like this one, the biggest buying mistake is ordering on appearance alone. Search by the exact model number wherever possible, because small appliance revisions can use different seals, filters, motors, pumps, lamps, shelves, or trims.
At a Glance
- No-heat drying faults usually affect drying performance far more than washing performance.
- Some machines will not heat if drainage or airflow conditions are not correct.
- Estimated time: 20-60 minutes depending on the design.
Safety First
Disconnect power and isolate water before accessing the heater circuit or internal ducting.
Common Causes
- Failed heater
- Faulty thermostat or thermal cut-out
- Airflow restriction
- Control fault
- Drainage fault preventing the dry stage working correctly
FAQ
Why Is My Washer Dryer Not Heating on Dry Cycle?
If the washer dryer enters a drying program but never gets warm, the cause may be the heating element, thermostat, thermal protection, airflow problem, or a control issue preventing the heater from energising.
How do I get a Confirmed Fit washer dryer spare part for this fault?
Use the full model number exactly as shown on the rating plate. When Spares2Repair matches that model to a compatible part we call it Confirmed Fit. Similar-looking parts can differ across revisions, production runs, and variants, so model matching is the safest route before ordering.
When should I stop and get professional help?
Stop and seek qualified help if the work involves unsafe live electrics, sealed systems, gas-related risks, or damage that goes beyond straightforward model-matched part replacement.
