Key Takeaways
- Miele washers are designed for 20 years — a 10-year-old machine is middle-aged, not old
- Repairs under $400 almost always make sense on machines under 15 years
- Repairs within $400-$700 cost more but buy you more years of life
- New W1 models offer significant water and energy savings over pre-2012 machines
The Bottom Line
Repair if the machine is under 12 years old and the cost is reasonable. Replace if the machine is 15+ years old with a major component failure, or if you've had three or more repairs in the past year.
Quick Decision Guide
| Machine Age | Minor Repair (<$250) | Moderate (From $250) | Major (>$500) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 5 years | Always repair | Always repair | Repair (check warranty) |
| 5–10 years | Always repair | Repair | Repair if otherwise healthy |
| 10–15 years | Repair | Evaluate carefully | Lean toward replace |
| 15+ years | Repair | Consider replacing | Replace |
Factors Beyond Cost
Repair History
A single expensive repair on an otherwise reliable machine is very different from a string of smaller repairs. If your technician has visited three or more times in the past year, the machine is in systemic decline — individual repairs will keep coming. This is the strongest signal to replace.
Parts Availability
Miele maintains parts availability for approximately 15 years after a model is discontinued. Beyond that window, critical parts like control boards and motors become difficult or impossible to source. If your technician says "the part is on back-order with no ETA," that is a red flag.
Energy and Water Efficiency
A Miele washer from 2008 uses approximately 50–70 litres of water per cycle. A current W1 model uses 40–50 litres. Electricity consumption has improved similarly. Over 10 years of average use (5 loads per week), the savings amount to From $600,000 — a meaningful offset against the cost of a new machine.
Noise and Features
Modern Miele W1 machines with the EcoSpeed motor are dramatically quieter than older models with brushed motors. If your machine shakes the floor during spin cycles (even with healthy bearings), a new machine will be noticeably better. Features like TwinDos automatic dispensing and WiFi connectivity are bonuses but should not drive the decision.
The Total Cost of Replacement
When comparing repair to replacement, include the full cost of a new machine:
- Purchase price: $1,200–$2,800 depending on model
- Delivery: From $0 (often free from retailers)
- Installation: From $50 (or DIY if competent)
- Old machine removal: From $30 (often included with delivery)
- Potential plumbing adjustments: From $0
Total: $1,300–$3,300 — compare this to the repair quote plus remaining expected lifespan value.