Key Takeaways
- KitchenAid washer and dryer production ended around 2012 — parts availability is increasingly limited.
- Control board failures on legacy units may not have available replacement parts.
- Modern washers and dryers offer significantly better efficiency than 12+ year old units.
- Matched laundry pair replacements preserve the visual coherence of your laundry room.
- Simple repairs (belts, hoses, switches) remain worth doing on legacy units.
The Bottom Line
Legacy KitchenAid washers and dryers face parts availability challenges. Simple repairs remain worth doing. Control board failures or major motor/compressor issues often signal it is time to replace — modern laundry pairs offer significantly better efficiency.
The End of KitchenAid Laundry
KitchenAid exited the standalone washer and dryer market around 2012 as Whirlpool consolidated its laundry lineup under the Whirlpool and Maytag brands. Legacy KitchenAid KAWS, KAWE, KHWV washers and KEHS, KGHS, KEYS dryers remain in service in many homes, but repair economics have shifted as these units age and parts availability declines.
Parts Availability Challenges
| Part Category | Availability | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Belts, hoses, door switches | Good (Whirlpool cross-reference) | Repair worthwhile |
| Motors and pumps | Adequate | Repair usually worthwhile |
| Control boards | Declining | Repair may not be possible |
| Drum assemblies | Limited | Repair rarely economical |
| Firmware-specific parts | Discontinued | Not repairable |
Simple Repairs Remain Worth Doing
Basic repairs on legacy KitchenAid laundry units — lid switch replacement, drive belt replacement, drain pump replacement, thermal fuse replacement on dryers — remain worth doing. These use common Whirlpool-platform parts that are still widely available. If your legacy KitchenAid washer needs a $165 lid switch or a $225 drain pump, the repair is still the smart choice.
When Control Boards Fail
Control board and motor control module failures are where parts availability becomes a problem. Replacement boards for legacy KitchenAid washers and dryers are increasingly difficult to source, and when available, they can run from $295. At that repair cost on a 12+ year old unit whose parts are approaching discontinued status, replacement is usually the better choice.
Modern Efficiency Advantages
Modern washers and dryers offer significant efficiency improvements compared to 12+ year old units. Modern front-load washers use 50% less water than older top-loads. Modern dryers with moisture sensing and heat pump technology use half the energy of older dryers. Over the 10–15 year life of a replacement pair, these savings add up to meaningful money — enough to offset replacement cost substantially.
Get an Honest Assessment
Our KitchenAid washer service and dryer service continue to support legacy units with genuine parts sourcing. We provide honest guidance on whether repair or replacement is the right call for your specific situation — including when parts availability makes repair impractical.