Viking ice maker repair costs $75 to $660 in 2026, and Viking wine cooler repair runs $150 to $1,000, depending on the fault. A water inlet valve runs $100 to $225, an ice maker assembly $250 to $600, and a wine cooler compressor $300 to $700. Built-in units cost more in labor than portable ones.
This guide covers both of Viking’s small refrigeration units in one place, so you can price a repair before you approve it. Viking Repair Pro is a Viking-only specialist servicing built-in and undercounter ice makers and single- and dual-zone wine coolers across California, Colorado, Nevada, Arizona, and Oregon. You will see what each fault costs, why built-in access adds to the bill, and when a repair beats a new unit. For a firm figure, request a diagnostic visit.
Viking ice maker and wine cooler repair cost at a glance (2026)
The failed part drives your total far more than the appliance size does. Ice maker repairs average about $260, with most homeowners paying $200 to $300 including labor (HomeGuide, 2026).
| Unit | Common fault | Typical benchmark range (2026) |
| Ice maker | Water inlet valve | $100–$225 |
| Ice maker | Ice maker assembly / module | $250–$600 |
| Ice maker | Water line / filter / clog | $75–$200 |
| Wine cooler | Thermostat / temperature control | $75–$300 |
| Wine cooler | Fan or door seal | $90–$300 |
| Wine cooler | Compressor | $300–$700 |
Benchmark ranges are national 2026 figures from HomeGuide, Angi, and ConsumerAffairs. A Viking specialist confirms the real fault and part number on site before quoting.
Viking ice maker repair cost by fault
Most Viking ice maker faults come down to water getting in, or ice getting out. A water inlet valve — the most common ice maker repair — runs $100 to $225, with about $155 for a straightforward job (Angi, 2026).
A clogged water line or filter ($75 to $200) is the cheapest fix and the most common cause of no ice. In hard-water areas, scale buildup on a Viking clear-ice machine is a frequent culprit and often a cleaning-and-descale visit rather than a part swap.
A full ice maker assembly or module replacement runs $250 to $600 on an in-fridge or built-in unit. Built-in and undercounter Viking models cost more in labor because access is tighter than on a portable machine.
If the unit makes no ice at all, start with the diagnosis rather than a part. Our guide on why a Viking ice maker stops making ice covers the checks first.
Viking wine cooler repair cost by fault
Wine cooler cost depends on one question: compressor or thermoelectric. A wine cooler compressor replacement runs $300 to $700, while total repairs range from $150 to $1,000 with labor as the main driver (Oscar Appliance Repair, 2026).
A thermostat or temperature control fault ($75 to $300) is the usual cause of a wine cooler that will not hold its 45°F to 65°F range. On a dual-zone Viking unit, one zone drifting while the other holds points at a zone sensor or control board.
A fan or door seal ($90 to $300) shows up as warm spots, condensation, or a unit that runs constantly. These are the lower-cost, single-visit repairs.
A compressor failure ($300 to $700) is the expensive case. On a built-in Viking wine column, that repair is usually worth it; on a small countertop thermoelectric unit, the fix can approach the price of a new one.
Are built-in units worth repairing?
For a built-in Viking ice maker or wine column, most repairs make sense. A $500 repair on a $6,000 built-in unit is under 10% of replacement, so it clears the bar long before the standard 50% rule applies.
The exception is a small thermoelectric or portable unit, where a compressor or Peltier-module failure can cost as much as buying new. We lay out the full decision in our repair-or-replace cost guide, and you can see pricing across every appliance in the Viking appliance repair cost guide.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to repair a Viking ice maker?
A Viking ice maker repair costs $75 to $660 in 2026, averaging about $260. A water inlet valve runs $100 to $225, and a full assembly replacement runs $250 to $600. Built-in and undercounter units cost more in labor than portable machines because access is tighter.
How much does a wine cooler repair cost?
A Viking wine cooler repair costs $150 to $1,000 in 2026, with the compressor being the priciest fault at $300 to $700. Thermostat, fan, and door-seal repairs run $75 to $300. A diagnostic visit confirms the exact figure before any work is approved.
Is it worth repairing a wine cooler?
Repairing a built-in Viking wine cooler is usually worth it, since a $300 to $700 repair is a fraction of a $4,000-plus column. On a small countertop thermoelectric unit, a major fault can cost as much as a new one, so replacement often wins there.
Get a firm Viking ice maker or wine cooler quote
The fault sets the price: $75 to $225 for a valve or water-line fix, $250 to $600 for an ice maker assembly, and $300 to $700 for a wine cooler compressor. A diagnosis on the unit turns those ranges into a real number.
Book a diagnostic with a manufacturer-trained Viking technician and get a written, part-specific quote before any work begins. See our Viking ice maker repair or Viking wine cooler repair service, or schedule a visit. Viking Repair Pro uses genuine Viking parts and offers same-day or next-day service in its core areas.