A GE refrigerator that stops cooling is one of the most urgent appliance problems you can face in Toronto. Food spoils quickly, and the longer you wait, the more you risk losing. At N Appliance Repair, we diagnose and fix GE fridges across the GTA every day. Here is what is most likely causing your GE fridge to stop cooling.
Most Common Reasons a GE Fridge Stops Cooling
Evaporator fan motor failure
The evaporator fan circulates cold air from the freezer into the fridge compartment. When the motor fails, the freezer stays cold but the fridge section warms up. Open the freezer and listen for the fan running. If you hear nothing, the motor has likely failed.
Defrost system failure
GE fridges use an automatic defrost cycle to prevent ice buildup on the evaporator coils. When the defrost heater, thermostat, or timer fails, ice accumulates on the coils and blocks airflow. The result: the fridge gradually warms up over 24-72 hours.
Dirty condenser coils
Condenser coils at the back or bottom of the fridge release heat. When coated in dust and pet hair, they cannot cool efficiently. Cleaning the coils every 6-12 months can prevent cooling problems. This is a free DIY fix.
Faulty thermistor (temperature sensor)
The thermistor monitors the fridge temperature and tells the compressor when to run. A failed thermistor sends incorrect readings, causing the compressor to cycle too little. Error codes on GE fridges often point to thermistor failure.
Condenser fan motor failure
The condenser fan draws air across the condenser coils. When it fails, heat builds up and the fridge cannot maintain temperature. Located near the compressor at the back or bottom of the fridge.
Quick diagnostic: Place a thermometer in the fridge section. If it reads above 40°F (4°C) but the freezer is at 0°F (-18°C), the evaporator fan is almost certainly the issue. If both sections are warm, the compressor or defrost system has likely failed.
GE Fridge Temperature Display Issues
Some GE fridge models display error codes when sensors fail. Common GE refrigerator codes include:
- ER IF / PO — ice fan motor failure
- ER dH — defrost heater failure
- ER FF — freezer fan motor failure
- tC / tF — temperature sensor failure
GE Fridge Not Cooling After Power Outage
Toronto experiences power outages, especially during summer storms. After power is restored, your GE fridge may take 24 hours to return to proper temperature. If it still has not cooled after 24 hours, the compressor start relay may have burned out during the power fluctuation.
Do not wait: If your GE fridge has been warm for more than 4 hours, food safety is at risk. Keep the door closed to maintain cold as long as possible, and call a technician if the fridge does not recover within 24 hours.
GE Fridge Not Cooling After Water Filter Change
Interestingly, some GE fridge models enter a reduced-cooling mode after a water filter is changed if the filter is not properly seated. If your fridge stopped cooling right after a filter change, remove and reinstall the filter, making sure it clicks into place.
GE Refrigerator Repair in Toronto
N Appliance Repair services all GE refrigerator models in Toronto, including Profile, Cafe, and Monogram series. We carry common GE parts and complete most repairs in a single visit with a 90-day warranty.
GE Fridge Not Cooling in Toronto?
Same-day service available. We carry GE parts. 90-day warranty on all repairs.
(437) 524-1053 — Call NowA refrigerator service call begins with temperature verification. We bring a calibrated thermometer to confirm actual fridge and freezer temperatures before opening the unit — this tells us whether we're dealing with a sealed system problem (compressor, refrigerant, condenser) or an airflow problem (evaporator fan, defrost heater, damper).
We then check the compressor start relay, evaporator coil for ice buildup, condenser coils for dust accumulation, and door seal integrity. Modern Ge refrigerators have diagnostic modes accessible via button combinations on the control panel — we pull the full error log before disassembling anything. Most airflow and defrost failures are repaired same-day. Sealed system repairs (compressor, refrigerant recharge) take longer and are assessed for cost-effectiveness relative to the unit's age.
We serve Toronto and the GTA, Monday to Saturday, 8 am–8 pm. All repairs carry a 90-day warranty.
Refrigerator Maintenance Tips to Keep Food Safe and Reduce Repairs
Refrigerators run 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Simple maintenance habits reduce power consumption, prevent breakdowns and extend the unit's life by years.
Clean Condenser Coils Twice a Year
Condenser coils release the heat extracted from your fridge. When coated with dust and pet hair, they can't dissipate heat efficiently — the compressor runs longer and hotter, wearing out sooner. Unplug the fridge, pull it away from the wall (or remove the front grille for bottom-mount coils), and vacuum the coils with a brush attachment. This 10-minute task twice a year is one of the highest-impact maintenance steps you can do.
Check the Door Seals Annually
A worn door gasket lets cold air escape continuously, forcing the compressor to compensate. Test the seal by closing the door on a piece of paper — you should feel resistance pulling it out. If the paper slides freely, the gasket is failing. Replacement gaskets cost $40–$80 and are straightforward to install, or our technicians can handle it during any service call. Damaged seals also cause frost buildup and moisture inside the cabinet.
Set Temperatures Correctly
The refrigerator section should run at 3°C–4°C; the freezer at -18°C. Higher temperatures allow bacterial growth in food; lower temperatures waste energy and can partially freeze fresh produce. Keep the fridge at 75–80% capacity — a full fridge maintains temperature better than an empty one, but overpacking blocks airflow from the evaporator fan. Leave at least 2.5 cm between items and the rear wall.
When your Ge fridge is running warm, making unusual noise or forming excessive frost, call our Toronto team for same-day diagnosis.