LG replace vs. repair (UK)
A simpler way to judge when a LG repair still makes sense and when the cost starts looking too high for the appliance.
Short answer
Most people land here after a quote or a likely fault has already made the appliance feel expensive. The real question is not repair versus replacement in the abstract, but whether this repair still makes sense now. That usually depends on both the likely repair cost and the kind of repair path the appliance is now headed toward.
- This is not a policy question. It is a decision about whether the repair still makes sense for the appliance you have.
- Repair makes more sense when the fault is narrow and the rest of the appliance still feels solid.
- The hard part is that the quoted repair may fix the current problem without fixing the rest of the wear or the chance of another bill later.
What keeps repair reasonable and what pushes it toward replacement
| Decision factor | Repair still makes sense when... | Replacement starts to make more sense when... |
|---|---|---|
| Fault scope | The issue appears limited to one assembly, one clear part, or one bounded repair. | The likely fix is spreading into a larger system, multiple parts, or a repair that no longer looks contained. |
| Recent spend | The appliance has not already needed repeat paid repairs. | The current repair looks like one more bill in a pattern instead of one isolated fix. |
| Overall condition | The rest of the appliance still feels solid for its category. | The repair would fix one issue on an appliance that is already showing age in other ways. |
| Replacement comparison | The repair remains clearly below the cost, disruption, and uncertainty of replacing the appliance. | The repair starts competing with the value of moving on instead. |
Why replacement can make sense before the appliance fully fails
| Older-appliance factor | What replacement changes | Why that shifts the decision |
|---|---|---|
| Broader wear or repeat symptoms | A replacement can clear more than the one fault being quoted right now. | A repair that fixes only one problem looks weaker if the rest of the appliance is also slipping. |
| Harder parts access or service friction | A replacement can reset the next repair cycle as well as the current one. | The decision changes when the current fix does not look like the last bill. |
| A repair that has widened beyond one part | Replacement removes the risk that the repair keeps expanding after the first quote. | This is where replacement starts to make more sense compared to the repair cost. |
What often pushes the decision toward replacement is not one bad quote by itself. It is the feeling that this repair is only the next bill on an appliance that is already getting weaker in other ways. If the issue still sounds more like symptom-matching than a final diagnosis, common problems can help narrow that down first.
What makes this call harder than a simple price comparison
- Start with the likely fault because a bounded part issue and a larger system fault are not the same kind of decision.
- Read cost ranges before making the repair-versus-replace call so the decision is tied to how big the repair is, not guesswork.
- Ask whether fixing this one problem is worth it if the rest of the appliance is already showing broader wear.
Next pages when the repair decision still feels unsettled
References used for this page
Official support, warranty, and service pages should remain the primary factual source. This section makes that sourcing visible.