My Frigidaire oven’s wild temperature swings have left me exhausted — can I get a refund?

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By Christopher Elliott

In this case: Frigidaire oven nightmare

in this case

  • A homeowner buys a new Frigidaire wall oven that ruins her baking with wild temperature swings of up to 60 degrees.
  • Frigidaire sends four technicians who fail to fix the appliance, with one admitting he doesn’t understand the technology.
  • See what happens when the homeowner refuses to accept a broken appliance and demands the manufacturer honor its warranty.

Cynthia Alviso’s new Frigidaire wall oven fluctuates between 35 degrees below and 60 degrees above its set temperature, ruining her baked goods. Despite four repair attempts, it’s still broken. Frigidaire insists the oven works properly. Can she get a refund? 

Question

I bought a Frigidaire wall oven from Lowe’s recently, and it’s been a disaster. The temperature swings wildly, burning one batch of cupcakes and undercooking another. 

Frigidaire has sent four technicians over the last two months, but none of them fixed the issue. One was a no-show. Another repairman had a full mailbox and was impossible to reach. And another admitted he “didn’t understand” the oven’s technology. 

I’ve contacted the California Department of Consumer Affairs and posted negative reviews, but Frigidaire keeps pushing more repairs. I’m exhausted. At what point does Frigidaire take responsibility and refund me? — Cynthia Alviso, Livermore, Calif. Your voice matters: The oven that couldn’t cook

Your voice matters

Cynthia Alviso’s new oven burns everything because of wild temperature swings. Frigidaire has sent four technicians who can’t fix it, yet the company refuses to replace it. We want to hear your thoughts.

  • How many failed repair attempts should a customer endure before a company replaces a “lemon” appliance?
  • Do you think retailers like Lowe’s should take more responsibility for the defective products they sell, rather than passing the buck to the manufacturer?
  • Have you ever owned an appliance so high-tech that even the repair technicians admitted they didn’t understand how to fix it?

Answer

Frigidaire should have fixed your oven promptly under its warranty or offered a refund after repeated failed repairs. The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act requires companies to honor warranties within a reasonable number of repair attempts, and four unsuccessful visits likely qualify.  

You did the right thing by documenting every interaction. A paper trail is so important in a case like this. I might have reached out sooner to one of the Frigidaire executive contacts. I list them on my consumer advocacy site, Elliott.org. Make sure you mention California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act, which protects your refund rights for defective products.

Your case underscores the importance of conducting research before buying any appliance. It looks like your oven was on sale at Lowe’s, and it’s possible the retailer was trying to get rid of unwanted appliances because they were unreliable. Always do your homework, and if there’s any doubt, it’s better to move on. After all, you’re going to be stuck with that oven for a while (even if it doesn’t work right).

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I asked you about the research, and you said you checked out the reviews, which were mostly positive. “One other reviewer had similar issues and I thought that was most likely a one-off,” you told me.

Lowe’s was also a dead end for resolving this, since you were past the 30-day warranty it offers and hadn’t purchased its extended protection.

But to be clear, an oven with that kind of mood swings is completely unacceptable. Frigidaire’s claims that it was fixed are absurd. (Maybe you should have offered the technicians some of your burnt cupcakes? I think that would have settled it.) 

I contacted Frigidaire on your behalf. A representative contacted you and agreed to process a refund, but there was a catch. You had to dispose of the old oven, and the refund wasn’t enough to buy a replacement oven because you’d received a sizable discount when you purchased the oven through Lowe’s. But in the end, you got every penny of your purchase price back, and that’s as much as I could have hoped for. Infographic: How to fight a lemon appliance

How to fight a lemon appliance claim

What to do when a manufacturer won’t fix your broken oven

Document the defect

Prove it’s broken. Don’t just say “it burns food.” Use an oven thermometer to log temperature swings. Take photos of burnt or undercooked food as evidence.
Track the repairs. Keep a detailed log of every technician visit, including no-shows, what was replaced, and any comments they made (like “I don’t understand this technology”).

Know the law

Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act. This federal law requires companies to fix a defective product within a “reasonable” number of attempts. If they can’t, they owe you a refund or replacement.
State protections. Laws like California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act offer even stronger protections for refunds on “lemon” products. Mentioning them gets results.

If they refuse: escalate

Stop calling customer service. Frontline agents often follow scripts to deny refunds. Switch to email to create a paper trail of your dispute.
Contact the executives. Use the executive contacts on Elliott.org. A polite email to a VP of Customer Care with your evidence often bypasses the “no refund” policy.
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Should a manufacturer automatically replace a new appliance if it cannot be fixed after three repair attempts?
Read more: Frigidaire appliance failures
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Christopher Elliott

Christopher Elliott is the founder of Elliott Advocacy, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that empowers consumers to solve their problems and helps those who can't. He's the author of numerous books on consumer advocacy and writes three nationally syndicated columns. He also publishes the Elliott Report, a news site for consumers, and Elliott Confidential, a critically acclaimed newsletter about customer service. If you have a consumer problem you can't solve, contact him directly through his advocacy website. You can also follow him on X, Facebook, and LinkedIn, or sign up for his daily newsletter.

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