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How to Get Free Replacement Parts from Manufacturers

Missing a part from your new appliance? Learn how to get manufacturers to send replacement parts for free instead of charging you.

Last edited on May 26, 2026
3 min read

Your new appliance arrived missing a part, or a component broke within the first few months. The manufacturer wants to charge you $30 for a replacement. But should you really have to pay for a part that should have been included or that failed prematurely?

When Manufacturers Should Provide Free Parts

You have a strong case for free replacement parts when:

  • The part was missing from the original packaging
  • The part broke during normal use within the warranty period
  • The part is a known defect — check online forums and consumer complaint databases
  • The product cannot function without the part — it is essential, not optional
  • You just purchased the product — the closer to the purchase date, the stronger your case

How to Request Free Parts

  1. Contact customer service — call or email the manufacturer directly (not the retailer)
  2. Be specific — provide your model number, serial number, and exactly which part you need
  3. Explain the situation — missing from box, broke during normal use, etc.
  4. Ask for a free replacement — do not assume you need to pay
  5. Escalate if needed — ask for a supervisor or the warranty department
  6. Reference the warranty — most products include at least a 1-year limited warranty

What to Do If They Refuse

If the manufacturer insists on charging:

  • Check your credit card purchase protection — many cards extend manufacturer warranties
  • File a complaint with the BBB — companies often respond to maintain their rating
  • Leave a detailed review mentioning the issue
  • Contact the retailer — some will provide replacement parts or process a return
  • Check for class action lawsuits — known defects sometimes have legal remedies

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Find the manufacturer's customer service number (not the retailer)
  • [ ] Have your model number, serial number, and purchase date ready
  • [ ] Describe the issue clearly and request a free replacement
  • [ ] Reference the product warranty if within the coverage period
  • [ ] Escalate to a supervisor if the first agent insists on charging
  • [ ] File a BBB complaint if the manufacturer refuses

Bottom Line

Most manufacturers would rather send a $5 part than lose a customer or get a bad review. The key is asking directly, being specific about the issue, and knowing when to escalate.

If you would rather not negotiate with a manufacturer's customer service department, an AI assistant can make the call, explain the issue, and secure the replacement part for you.

Lisa Wei

Lisa Wei

Content Strategist

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