Are KitchenAid mixer parts interchangeable?
Yes, some KitchenAid parts are interchangeable, but it depends on the part type and the exact mixer design. For the KitchenAid KV25MEXOB5 5.5-quart professional stand mixer, power-hub attachments are generally designed to fit the hub across many KitchenAid stand mixers, while internal drive parts and housings must match the model and series.
- Power hub attachments: Typically interchangeable across KitchenAid stand mixers because the hub interface is standardized.
- Bowls and beaters: Sometimes interchangeable, but bowl-lift vs tilt-head designs and bowl size (5 qt vs 6 qt) often change fit.
- Cosmetic parts (covers, housings, bases): Usually model- and color-specific.
- Internal mechanical parts (gears, bearings, seals): Must match the exact transmission and motor design.
- Electrical parts (motor, switches, wiring): Must match the model’s electrical and mounting specs.
For KV25MEXOB5, we recommend matching replacement parts by model number, not just by appearance. For example, if you are servicing the gearcase, use the exact gearcase assembly listed for this model, such as the gear case W10343978, and use the correct lubricant specified for stand mixer gearcases, such as grease W11200218.
| Part type | Interchangeable? | Best way to confirm |
|---|---|---|
| Hub attachments | Often yes | Confirm it is a KitchenAid hub attachment and seats fully |
| Bowl / beater | Sometimes | Match bowl-lift style and quart size |
| Gearcase / gears | Rarely | Match the exact KV25MEXOB5 part ID |
| Motor | Rarely | Match the exact KV25MEXOB5 part ID |
Using a “close enough” internal part can cause poor mixing performance, unusual noise, grease leakage, or premature gear wear. Matching the correct KV25MEXOB5 part ID helps ensure proper fit, alignment, and long-term reliability.
Last updated: February 2026
Do KitchenAid attachments fit all models?
Most KitchenAid hub-powered attachments fit the KV25MEXOB5 and other KitchenAid stand mixers because they connect to the standard front power hub. What does not universally interchange are bowls and bowl-mounted beaters (flat beater, dough hook, wire whip), which must match the mixer style and bowl size.
Hub attachments are the most consistent because they mount to the front hub and use the mixer’s motor.
- Pasta roller/cutter sets
- Food grinder
- Slicer/shredder
- Ice cream maker drive-style hub accessories (when designed for the hub)
- Third-party hub attachments that explicitly list KitchenAid hub compatibility
KV25MEXOB5 is a bowl-lift, 5.5-quart professional stand mixer; those details matter for anything that touches the bowl or planetary.
- Bowls: capacity, bowl-lift arm geometry, and locking points vary
- Beaters/whips/hooks: shaft length and bowl clearance differ by series
- Pouring shields and bowl covers: depend on bowl rim shape and diameter
- Some specialty attachments that mount to the bowl or base (not the hub)
| Item type | Typical compatibility | What to verify before buying |
|---|---|---|
| Front hub attachment | Usually universal | Hub mount style and included coupler/drive |
| Bowl | Not universal | Quart size, bowl-lift vs tilt-head, locking style |
| Flat beater/whip/hook | Not universal | Designed for KV25-series bowl-lift mixers |
Using the wrong bowl or beater can cause poor mixing, metal-on-metal contact, or excessive vibration. If you notice wobble, scraping, or clicking after swapping accessories, stop and re-check fitment.
If an attachment fits but slips, chatters, or leaks grease at the hub/gearcase area, these parts are often involved in repairs (fit depends on the exact breakdown for KV25MEXOB5):
- Gasket WP9709511 (helps seal the gearcase)
- Stand mixer grease W11200218 (used when re-packing the gearcase)
- Bearing WPW10170080 (supports rotating shafts)
Last updated: February 2026
Do KitchenAid stand mixers have a lifetime warranty?
No. KitchenAid stand mixers, including the KitchenAid KV25MEXOB5 5.5-quart professional stand mixer, are sold with a limited warranty (not a lifetime warranty). Warranty length and coverage vary by series and purchase date, so we recommend confirming the exact terms on your warranty paperwork and receipt.
When customers see “limited lifetime,” it typically applies to a specific item or component category, not the entire stand mixer.
- It usually does not mean the motor, gears, or electronics are covered for life
- It often applies only to certain accessories, cookware, or a specific part category
- Coverage is typically limited to defects in materials or workmanship
- Normal wear, misuse, and cosmetic issues are commonly excluded
- Proof of purchase and the original owner requirements are common
Use these checks to match your mixer to the correct warranty terms.
- Locate your model number on the rating label and confirm it matches KV25MEXOB5
- Check your receipt for the purchase date (warranty periods start from purchase)
- Review any registration confirmation or warranty card that came with the mixer
- If the mixer was a gift, ask for the original proof of purchase
- If you bought an extended plan, keep that contract with your receipt
| Warranty wording | What it typically covers | What you should look for |
|---|---|---|
| Limited warranty | Defects for a set time | Term length, exclusions, who pays shipping/labor |
| Extended service plan | Repairs beyond the factory term | Coverage dates, deductible, authorized servicers |
| Limited lifetime (specific item) | A defined part or product line | Exactly which item is named, not the whole mixer |
Warranty terms affect whether a repair is worth doing versus replacing a failed component. For example, if your mixer is out of warranty and you are troubleshooting noise, overheating, or loss of power, common repair paths involve internal drive components, seals, or lubrication such as grease W11200218.
Last updated: February 2026
What is the most common problem with the KitchenAid mixer?
The most common issue we see on the KitchenAid KV25MEXOB5 stand mixer is gearcase wear and grease breakdown, which shows up as grinding noises, a beater that stops under load, or grease leaking into the bowl area. A close second is beater-to-bowl clearance being out of adjustment.
- Loud grinding, clicking, or rattling while mixing
- Beater turns but struggles with thick doughs, or stops intermittently
- Grease seepage around the planetary area or into the bowl zone
- Mixer runs but the beater does not rotate consistently
- Beater scrapes the bowl, or leaves unmixed ingredients at the bottom
Most KV25MEXOB5 “common problems” trace back to normal wear in the drive system or aging lubricant.
| Symptom | Most likely cause | Typical fix path |
|---|---|---|
| Grinding noise under load | Worn gears or dry/contaminated grease | Inspect gears; regrease; replace damaged drive parts |
| Grease leak | Old grease separating or overfilled gearcase | Clean out and repack with correct mixer grease |
| Beater hits bowl or misses ingredients | Beater height out of adjustment | Adjust beater-to-bowl clearance |
| Runs but won’t mix well | Internal drive slip or bearing wear | Check gearcase, bearings, and planetary drive |
When the mixer is noisy, leaking grease, or losing drive, these model-matched parts are often involved:
Continuing to run a KV25MEXOB5 with grinding gears or failing grease can accelerate wear in the gearcase and bearings, turning a simple regrease into a larger repair. Correcting beater height also prevents bowl damage and improves mixing performance.
Last updated: February 2026
What year was the KitchenAid KV25MEXOB5 made?
KitchenAid model KV25MEXOB5 is not tied to one single “model year”; it was produced across a run of years, and the exact build date depends on the unit’s serial number. For the most accurate year, we match your serial number format to KitchenAid’s date code and confirm it against the correct parts configuration for your mixer.
Look for the model and serial tag on the mixer (commonly on the underside of the base or on the rear of the pedestal/column). Then use these checks:
- Confirm the model number reads KV25MEXOB5 (letters and numbers must match exactly).
- Write down the full serial number (do not omit letters).
- Note where the tag is located (underside vs. rear), since tag style can vary by production run.
- Compare your mixer’s finish and trim to the parts shown for this model to ensure you are not mixing in a close variant.
- If the tag is worn, take a clear photo and rewrite the characters carefully.
| What you have | What it tells us | Accuracy |
|---|---|---|
| Model number (KV25MEXOB5) | Product family and parts platform | Good for parts lookup |
| Serial number | Manufacturing date code (year and week) | Best |
| Cosmetic clues (color, band, logo) | Helps narrow era only | Limited |
The build year affects which internal parts and revisions your KitchenAid 5.5-quart professional stand mixer uses (for example, gearcase components, seals, and lubrication). Confirming the year helps prevent ordering a part that fits a similar-looking mixer but not your exact production run.
When you are verifying your mixer’s configuration, these commonly referenced items can help you cross-check what you have installed:
- Gear case W10343978 (gearcase assembly style)
- Stand mixer grease W11200218 (correct lubricant type for re-greasing)
- Bearing WPW10170080 (bearing style used in the drive system)
Last updated: February 2026
What's better, tilt head or bowl-lift?
For heavy mixing and frequent bread or large batches, a bowl-lift design is better; it’s more stable under load. Your KitchenAid KV25MEXOB5 is a 5.5-quart professional stand mixer in the bowl-lift style, so it’s the stronger choice when power and durability matter most.
| Feature | Tilt-head stand mixer | Bowl-lift stand mixer (like KV25MEXOB5) |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Everyday mixing, smaller batches | Dough, dense mixes, larger batches |
| Stability under load | Good | Excellent |
| Access to bowl | Very easy (head tilts back) | Easy (bowl lowers/raises) |
| Counter clearance | Usually shorter | Usually taller |
| Typical feel | Convenience-first | Performance-first |
- Choose tilt-head if you prioritize quick access for scraping the bowl and adding ingredients.
- Choose bowl-lift if you make bread dough, thick cookie dough, or run long mixing sessions.
- If you often mix heavy loads, bowl-lift reduces strain on the head hinge area.
- If you have low cabinets, measure clearance; bowl-lift models are commonly taller.
- If you already own KV25MEXOB5, you’re already in the “heavy-duty” category.
A bowl-lift mixer’s performance depends on keeping the drive system tight and properly lubricated. If you notice gear noise, grease leakage, or inconsistent mixing speed, common service items include the gearcase seal and food-safe grease such as grease W11200218 and sealing parts like gasket WP9709511.
Choosing the right head style affects mixing results and longevity. Bowl-lift mixers handle torque better, which helps protect gears and bearings when you’re working with dense doughs and full bowls.
Last updated: February 2026





