If you’re repairing your own dryer, the right part at the right price makes the difference between a $25 fix and a $150 repair bill. Here’s where to actually buy dryer parts — and how to avoid the pitfalls.
Where We Buy Parts (And Why Amazon Wins Most of the Time)
We’re a repair shop. We have accounts with local appliance parts distributors and wholesale suppliers. And we’ll tell you straight: for common dryer parts, Amazon is usually cheaper — sometimes by 50% or more.
A real example: Samsung single-element heaters. Our local parts supplier price with our “discount” account: $43.59. The same OEM-spec part on Amazon: $12–18 with free Prime shipping.
That’s not an outlier. We see similar spreads on thermofuses, thermostats, belts, idler pulleys, and drum support rollers.
There are a few reasons to use a local parts house:
- You need the part today and can’t wait even for next-day delivery
- The part is unusual or specialized enough that it’s not stocked on Amazon
- You’re not sure of the exact part number and want someone to look it up for you
For everything else, Amazon is almost always the right call.
How to Find the Right Part Number
Step 1: Get your model number The model number sticker is usually:
- Inside the door frame (front-loading dryers)
- On the back panel
- On a small plate on the bottom front
Write down the full model number including any letter suffix.
Step 2: Search with the model number Go to AppliancePartsPros.com and enter your model number. This site has exploded views of your exact model showing every part with the OEM part number. Find the part you need and note the number.
Step 3: Search Amazon with the OEM part number Search the exact part number on Amazon. You’ll find both OEM (factory original) and aftermarket options. For heating elements and thermofuses, aftermarket parts are generally reliable. For control boards and more complex electronics, OEM is worth the premium.
Most Common Dryer Parts and What They Cost on Amazon
| Part | Common Models | Amazon Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Heating element | Whirlpool/Kenmore #279838 | $15–30 |
| Thermofuse | Whirlpool/Kenmore #3392519 | $5–10 |
| Dryer belt | Whirlpool/Maytag #661570 | $10–18 |
| Drum support rollers | Most brands (pair) | $12–25 |
| Idler pulley | Most brands | $8–15 |
| Door switch | Most brands | $8–15 |
| Samsung heating element | #DC47-00019A | $12–18 |
| LG heating element | #5301EL1001J | $18–30 |
| Frigidaire element | #134792700 | $20–35 |
Return Policy: Amazon’s Secret Advantage
The one advantage Amazon has that local parts houses can’t match: easy returns. If you misdiagnose the problem and order the wrong part, returning it to Amazon is simple and free in most cases.
Returning a part to a local appliance supplier is often a restocking fee situation — or they won’t take it at all if it’s been opened.
This matters because even experienced technicians occasionally misdiagnose. Having an easy return path takes the pressure off.
Common Dryer Symptoms and the Parts That Fix Them
| Symptom | Most Likely Part | Second Guess |
|---|---|---|
| No heat | Heating element or thermofuse | Thermostat, control board |
| Won’t start | Door switch | Belt switch, control board |
| Loud squealing | Drum support rollers | Idler pulley, drum glides |
| Loud thumping | Drum support rollers | Drum glide pads |
| Takes too long | Clogged vent (clean it first) | Heating element weak |
| Drum not turning | Drive belt | Motor, idler pulley |
When to Call Instead of DIY
Some dryer problems are worth calling a technician for:
- Gas dryers — If you’re not comfortable working with gas connections, don’t
- Control board failures — These can be misdiagnosed easily; a $150 board on the wrong diagnosis is a bad day
- Motor failures — Possible DIY but labor-intensive; sometimes the repair approaches replacement cost
For Edmond and OKC area, we’re at 405-730-9131. We’ll tell you honestly over the phone whether it’s a worthwhile repair or if the dryer is reaching end-of-life.