Match your symptom to narrow down the likely cause before calling us.
These checks are safe for homeowners. Do not attempt to open sealed refrigerant systems, touch electrical components behind access panels, or work on gas lines — always call a licensed technician for those.
Electric dryers use a 240V double-pole breaker. If one side trips, the dryer drum runs but produces no heat. Go to your electrical panel and look for the dryer breaker. If it's tripped to the middle position, reset it by pushing it fully off then back on. If it trips again immediately, call an electrician — do not force it.
The shutoff valve on the gas supply line behind a gas dryer should have its handle running parallel to the pipe (open). If it's perpendicular (across the pipe), it's closed. This is the only gas-related check a homeowner should perform — leave everything else to a qualified technician.
A blocked vent causes the dryer to overheat, which blows the thermal fuse (a safety device). If your thermal fuse has blown, it almost certainly means the vent is partially blocked. Clean the full vent duct before any repair — otherwise the new thermal fuse will blow again quickly.
Go outside and look at the dryer vent exhaust while the dryer runs. The flap should open and you should feel warm air flow. If it doesn't open, clean it from the outside. Birds' nests are a common obstruction in Charlotte.
The two most common causes are: (1) a tripped circuit breaker on one leg of the 240V supply — easy to check and reset yourself, and (2) a blown thermal fuse — a one-time safety device that prevents fires by cutting heat when the dryer overheats, usually from a blocked vent.
A thermal fuse is one of the simpler DIY appliance repairs, but there's a critical caveat: if the thermal fuse blew, your vent is almost certainly restricted. Replacing the fuse without clearing the vent will just blow the new fuse. We recommend having a technician diagnose the full situation to prevent fire risk.
Gas dryer no-heat failures are usually the igniter, the gas valve coils (solenoids), or the thermal fuse. Confirm your gas valve is open first. If it is and there's still no heat, a technician needs to check the igniter and coils — these involve the gas system and shouldn't be serviced without proper training.
A heating element replacement for an electric dryer in Charlotte typically runs $100–$180 including parts and labor. Thermal fuse replacement is usually $80–$130. Gas valve coil replacement is typically $100–$200. HomeHeroes provides upfront pricing before any work begins.
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