GE WASHER · ORANGE COUNTY
GE Washer Leaking
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Water is escaping the washer during fill, wash, or drain because a hose, seal, or gasket has failed or a connection has come loose.
What is going on.
A leaking washer can put water on the floor fast and damage flooring and cabinets if it is ignored. The leak often starts small at a hose clamp or a worn gasket and grows over time. Tracing it means watching the machine through a full cycle to see when and where water appears. Some fixes are simple, such as tightening a clamp, while a torn door boot or a failed tub seal needs a technician.
Most common causes.
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Torn door boot gasket (front-load)
The large rubber boot that seals the door to the tub tears or develops holes, often from a coin or an underwire working into it. It is the most common leak source on front-load machines.
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Loose or cracked fill or drain hose
Supply hoses at the back can loosen at the connection or split with age. The internal tub-to-pump hose can crack or lose its clamp and drip during the wash.
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Worn tub seal
The seal around the shaft at the bottom of the tub keeps water inside. When it fails, water drips from the center underside of the machine during agitation or spin.
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Failed water inlet valve
The inlet valve controls water entering the machine. A cracked body or a stuck valve can leak at the back of the washer even when no cycle is running.
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Overloading or too much detergent
A packed drum can push water past the door seal, and excess suds can overflow. This looks like a leak but is a usage issue, not a broken part.
Try this first: safe DIY checks.
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Stop the cycle, lay down towels, and watch a short cycle to note whether water appears during fill, wash, or spin.
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Check the fill hose connections at the back and at the wall, and hand-tighten any that are loose.
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Inspect the rubber fill and drain hoses for cracks, bulges, or stiff spots, and replace a hose that looks worn.
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On a front-load machine, pull back the door boot gasket and look for tears, holes, or trapped coins and debris.
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Run one load with the recommended amount of high-efficiency detergent to rule out oversudsing.
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Wipe the floor dry, run a cycle, and check whether the water comes from under the center of the machine, which points to the tub seal.
GE washing machine leaking.
GE washers span traditional top-loaders with a dual-action agitator, impeller top-loaders, and front-load models, several of which use the UltraFresh vent system to air out the tub after a cycle. On agitator and impeller cabinets the usual suspects are the lid lock, the drain pump, the inlet valve, and the shift actuator that switches the machine between wash and spin. Front-load units more often need attention at the door boot, the drain pump filter, or the drum bearings, and a no-spin complaint frequently traces to the door lock rather than the motor.
Esquire is an independent repair company. We are not factory-authorized for GE and not affiliated with GE Appliances (a Haier company). We service GE washing machine units the same way we service every major brand: a clear diagnosis, a written quote, and a 90-day parts and labor warranty.
What does this repair cost?
Full repair (parts + labor)
$130 to $400
Time on site
1-2.5 hrs
Range reflects 2026 parts and labor for the Orange County market and varies with the failed part. $65 diagnostic, waived with repair. 90-day parts and labor warranty.
Questions homeowners ask.
- Is it safe to keep using a leaking washer?
- No. Even a slow leak can warp flooring and reach the subfloor. Stop using the machine until the source is found and fixed.
- Why does my front-load washer leak from the door?
- A door leak usually means the rubber boot gasket is torn or has trapped debris holding it open. Wiping the boot dry after each load also helps prevent mildew that weakens it.
- Could too much detergent cause a leak?
- Yes. Excess detergent or non-HE detergent in an HE machine creates heavy suds that overflow the tub and door seal. Use the labeled amount of HE detergent.
Leaking usually gets worse. Book a diagnosis.
We diagnose, quote in writing, and most repairs finish on the first visit. Diagnostic is $65, waived with the repair.
- Same & next-day appointments available, 7 days a week
- Service call from $65 (varies by appliance), waived with the repair
- 90-day parts and labor warranty