A clear warranty protects your investment and sets expectations for parts coverage, labor, and service costs. Before purchasing equipment or approving repairs, you need to understand what is covered, what is limited, and what expenses remain your responsibility.
This guide explains how warranty terms work in real situations, including consumable limits, freight costs, and service coverage after repairs. Review these details early so coverage aligns with your budget and long-term maintenance plan.
Warranty Limits You Need to Read Before You Buy
Consumable Part-Time Limits Can Be Short
Some manufacturers put clear limitations in writing, and the biggest one is how they define a consumable part. A part may only be covered for 90 or 120 days, even if the marketing suggests a longer term overall.
Before you commit, look for language that answers these questions:
- What does the manufacturer list as “consumable”?
- What are the exact day limits for those parts?
- What documentation or process do they require for parts requests?
Key Takeaway: The term length on paper matters less than the limitations inside it. Read the consumable part section first so expectations match reality.
A Three-Year Claim Can Still Have Fine Print
A manufacturer may claim a three-year term, but limitations can change what you actually receive. That is why we tell customers to confirm the details rather than rely on the headline.
We also flag one item that surprises people: freight. Even when a part qualifies for coverage, shipping costs often remain your responsibility.
Parts Coverage Options With the Manufacturers We Represent
What “All Parts Covered” Usually Includes
With the manufacturers we represent, coverage typically applies to all parts for the full term. That includes common items such as:
- belts
- door locks
- water valves
- igniters
This is the difference between a limited plan and one that supports predictable parts coverage. You still need to confirm the term length on the specific unit you are buying, but the parts list is typically broad.
Extended Warranty Options for Longer Parts Coverage
A few manufacturers also offer the option to purchase a five-year extended parts plan where everything is covered. That option can make sense when you want longer parts coverage.
No matter which option you choose, keep freight in your budget. If you pick up a part at our shop, there is no shipping cost. If a part has to be shipped or returned to a manufacturer, the manufacturer typically does not cover that freight expense, and you should plan to pay it.
Need expert help reviewing coverage terms and choosing the right plan? Contact RJ Kool for a free consultation.
Repair Coverage and Service Expectations After the Work Is Done
Our One-Year Parts and Labor Coverage After a Repair
Manufacturer coverage is only one layer. On the service side, we also set clear expectations. With our company, we cover parts and labor for a full year after we complete a repair. That gives you a defined window where the repair outcome is covered.
If we perform an expensive repair, such as installing bearing seals, and it starts leaking again within a year, you should expect that to be handled. We handle it.
Pro Tip: Keep your repair paperwork and note what was repaired. Clear documentation helps set expectations and keeps follow-up conversations focused.
How We Separate Related and Unrelated Issues
This is where frustration can build. We fix one issue, and something else unrelated breaks later. Differentiating those problems matters. A drain valve repair is not the same as a water valve problem, even though both involve water.
The same logic applies across machines. If we walk by a dryer while working on a washer, that does not mean we caused a dryer issue. Clear scope and clear communication help expectations match what was actually repaired.
If you want help reviewing terms, comparing options, and setting the right expectations for parts, freight, and service coverage, contact RJ Kool and let us guide you through your next warranty.





