Help! A $1,400 Frigidaire cooktop catastrophe sent me through a customer service maze

Photo of author

By Christopher Elliott

in this case

  • Linda Lockwood pays $1,400 for a new Frigidaire cooktop, but a repair attempt leaves the unit cracked and still making noise.
  • The technician ghosts her, missing multiple appointments, while Best Buy and Frigidaire trade blame over who is responsible for the lemon.
  • With her warranty clock ticking down and no working stove in sight, she fights to get her money back before she is stuck with a broken appliance forever.

A noisy, cracked induction cooktop from Frigidaire leaves Linda Lockwood chasing repairs, dealing with missed appointments, and getting the runaround from both the manufacturer and Best Buy. After months of unanswered calls and emails, Lockwood wonders: Will anyone take responsibility for this $1,400 kitchen disaster?

Question

I paid $1,400 for a new Frigidaire induction cooktop from Best Buy. It was noisy from the start, but the installer said the sound would go away. Three months later, it was still noisy, so I called Frigidaire for service. 

A technician replaced the cooling fans, but the noise didn’t improve. That same day, I found a crack across the cooktop. 

I called Frigidaire, and a representative told me to contact the technician. But the technician never answered the phone. 

Frigidaire promised to arrange another appointment, but the technician missed two more scheduled visits. I’ve called and emailed both companies repeatedly, and while I did speak to a Frigidaire supervisor once, nothing ever happened. I also contacted Best Buy, but they said it was Frigidaire’s problem. 

I have all my receipts and a record of my correspondence. Now I’m worried they’re just waiting for my warranty to expire. I want to return the cooktop for a full refund or at least get store credit from Best Buy. I’ve lost time and patience dealing with technicians who don’t show up and customer service that doesn’t respond. What else can I do to get this resolved? — Linda Lockwood, Mill Valley, Calif.

Answer

You bought a brand-new induction cooktop, and you should expect it to work quietly and reliably. When it didn’t, Frigidaire owed you a prompt, effective repair or a replacement — especially after its authorized technician left you with a cracked cooktop and the original noise problem unresolved. 

Under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, manufacturers must honor written warranties, which means fixing defects or replacing the product within a reasonable time. California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act also holds manufacturers accountable for defects and service mishaps. 

Berkshire Hathaway Travel Protection covers consumers and their travel dreams, backed by Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance Company’s financial strength and security. Choose travel insurance designed specifically to your trip and travelers, plus the fastest claims payments in the travel insurance industry. Get more information at Berkshire Hathaway Travel Protection.

Frigidaire’s warranty covers defects in materials and workmanship, and a crack caused during a service visit should absolutely be its responsibility. Best Buy, as the retailer, also has a duty to support you, at least by facilitating your warranty claim — especially since you reported the problem so soon after purchase.

You did almost everything right: you called for help, kept your receipts, and documented your efforts with emails. But there’s one thing I always recommend — keep every bit of correspondence in writing, and escalate quickly when you don’t get responses.

🏆 Your top comment

A $1,400 cooktop that is noisy from day one already sounds like a lemon. After a cracked surface, the conversation should shift from repair to replacement.

– Jennifer
Read more insightful reader feedback. See all comments.

Always ask for a supervisor in writing, and if you don’t get a response, move up the chain. I publish executive contacts for Frigidaire’s parent company, Electrolux, on my advocacy site, Elliott.org. A polite, concise email to an executive often gets results when routine customer service fails.

This was a complicated case. I reached out to Best Buy to see if it could help reach an agreement between you, the manufacturer and the technician. 

“I heard from both Frigidaire corporate and Best Buy corporate and am returning my Frigidaire cooktop and buying a new Bosch cooktop,” you reported.

Remember: when customer service goes quiet, it’s time to turn up the heat. Don’t be silent. Otherwise, you could get stuck with a broken appliance.

Your voice matters

Linda Lockwood spent $1,400 on a high-end cooktop, only to have a repair technician crack it and vanish. Now she is trapped between a retailer and a manufacturer who refuse to take ownership.

  • When an authorized technician damages your appliance during a repair, who is ultimately responsible: the service provider, the manufacturer, or the retailer who sold it?
  • Should big-box retailers like Best Buy have a “lemon policy” to protect customers from immediate product failures?
  • Have you ever been “ghosted” by a repair service while waiting for a critical fix?
175
Have you ever had a repair technician ghost you after scheduling an appointment?

What you’re saying

Readers zeroed in on the “ghosting” phenomenon, labeling it a breach of warranty. Others argued that once an authorized technician breaks a product, the debate between repair and replacement should end immediately.

  • The ghosting epidemic

    Miles Will Save Us All and M.C. Storm identified missed appointments as a growing trend that renders warranties useless. If the technician never shows up, the service contract is effectively void.

  • You break it, you buy it

    The Brown Crusader and JenniferFinger argued that since Frigidaire hired the technician who cracked the cooktop, the manufacturer owns the damage. Frank Loncar expressed surprise that the company didn’t try to blame the customer for the crack.

  • Retailer responsibility

    Laura and Jennifer criticized Best Buy for disappearing after the sale. They noted that a $1,400 appliance that is noisy out of the box is a lemon, and the retailer should have facilitated the return rather than passing the buck.

Photo of author

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.

Related Posts