What's the life expectancy of a Maytag dryer?
A Maytag electric dryer like model MED7000AW0 typically lasts 12 to 15 years with normal household use. Consistent airflow (clean lint screen and proper venting) and quick repair of wear parts (rollers, idler pulley, heating system) are what most often push lifespan toward the high end.
Typical lifespan and what affects it
Most dryers fail early from heat and airflow stress, not from the cabinet or drum itself. For MED7000AW0, the biggest lifespan drivers are:
- Keeping the vent run short and as straight as possible
- Avoiding crushed or kinked venting
- Cleaning lint buildup (screen, housing, vent)
- Replacing noisy or worn drum support parts before they damage the drum
- Preventing overheating that can trip thermal cut-offs
For venting and installation best practices, follow the installation guide.
What usually wears out first (and what it sounds like)
These are common wear items on Maytag electric dryers and the symptoms they create:
- Thumping or rumbling: drum support rollers (often flat-spotted)
- Squealing: idler pulley or belt path friction
- No heat or overheating: heating element circuit, thermostats, thermal cut-off
- Long dry times: restricted venting, blower wheel issues, moisture sensor problems
If you are already hearing rumbling, the dryer drum support roller WPW10314173 is a common fix item on this platform.
Quick “life extension” checklist (10 minutes)
- Clean the lint screen every load
- Check outside vent hood for strong airflow
- Inspect vent for crushing behind the dryer
- Use rigid metal venting where possible (best airflow)
- Keep the dryer level so sensor cycles work correctly
Why it matters
Poor venting and restricted airflow can shorten dryer life by increasing heat stress, increasing run time, and triggering safety devices. The installation instructions also note that overly long exhaust systems reduce performance and can shorten dryer life.
What to expect by age
| Dryer age | What we commonly see | Best next step |
|---|---|---|
| 0-5 years | Minor maintenance | Vent and lint cleaning routine |
| 6-10 years | Wear parts get noisy | Rollers and idler inspection |
| 11-15 years | Heat and drive issues more likely | Proactive service, replace key wear parts |
Last updated: February 2026
Where to find part number on Maytag dryer?
On your Maytag MED7000AW0 electric dryer, we find the most reliable place to identify the correct replacement part is the model and serial tag; once you have that information, we match the exact part number to your dryer’s parts list. Use the MED7000AW0 installation guide for model and serial recording fields.
Where to look on the dryer
Check these common locations for the model and serial label (the tag that lets us look up the correct part number):
- Door opening area: along the door frame or just inside the opening
- Inside the door: on the door itself or the inner panel edge
- Back panel: near the power cord entry or rear cabinet panel
- Side cabinet panel: near the lower side or rear edge
- Lint screen housing: around the lint filter opening on some builds
What to write down (and why)
Record the details exactly as shown on the tag:
- Model number (for this dryer: MED7000AW0)
- Serial number (identifies the production run)
- Any type/code or engineering digits if listed
Why it matters
Maytag dryers often use different versions of the same-looking component across production runs. The model and serial information ensures we select the correct heating, drum support, and control parts for your exact MED7000AW0.
Quick examples of “part number” vs “part ID”
On Sears PartsDirect, you may see both a manufacturer part number and our part ID for the same item.
| What you see | Example | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Part name | Dryer heating element | The component description |
| Part ID | WP8544771 | Sears PartsDirect identifier used on the part page |
| Part number | 8544771 | Manufacturer part number |
If you already know the part you need, a common example on this model is the dryer heating element WP8544771.
Tips to avoid ordering the wrong part
- Use the model number first, then confirm with the serial number
- Match the part name to the symptom (no heat, squeal, long dry times)
- Compare connectors and mounting points to your original part
- If your dryer is noisy, inspect wear items like rollers and the idler pulley before ordering
Last updated: February 2026
Why is my brand new Maytag dryer not drying?
A brand new Maytag MED7000AW0 electric dryer usually “won’t dry” because it is not heating correctly or airflow is restricted. Start with setup items from the MED7000AW0 installation guide, then confirm you are using a heated cycle and that the dryer is level so the moisture-sensing cycles work properly.
Quick checks that fix most “new dryer not drying” complaints
- Clean the lint screen before every load.
- Verify the vent is connected, not crushed or kinked, and the existing vent run is clean.
- Make sure you selected a heated cycle (for first test, use Time Dry heated; do not use Air Only).
- Confirm the dryer is level; moisture sensing can act up when the cabinet is tilted.
- If installed in a cold area, keep the space above 40°F (4°C); low temps can cause longer drying times.
- Avoid overloading; clothes need room to tumble.
Airflow and installation details to verify
Restricted airflow is the most common reason a new dryer takes too long to dry.
| What to check | What “good” looks like | What causes long dry times |
|---|---|---|
| Vent connection | 4-inch vent clamped securely | Loose connection, wrong size, leaks |
| Vent path | Short, straight, clean | Long run, many elbows, lint buildup |
| Dryer position | Vent not crushed behind dryer | Kinked or flattened vent |
| Leveling | Dryer does not rock | Moisture sensor cycles end wrong |
For step-by-step setup and leveling guidance, follow the MED7000AW0 installation guide.
If it tumbles but does not heat
If airflow is good and cycles are correct, focus on the heating circuit.
Common parts involved on this model include:
- Dryer heating element WP8544771 (no heat or weak heat)
- Dryer thermal cut-off fuse kit 279973 (dryer runs but won’t heat)
- Dryer high-limit thermostat WP8557403 (overheating protection can stop heat)
- Dryer thermistor WP8577274 (temperature sensing issues can affect heat control)
Why it matters
Poor airflow or an incorrect first-time setup can make a new dryer seem “defective,” but it also increases drying time, energy use, and heat stress on components like the heating element and thermostats.
Last updated: February 2026





