Do you have to soak a Samsung water filter before you put it in the fridge?
You do not need to soak the water filter before installing it in your Samsung RF261BEAESR refrigerator. The correct prep is to install the filter, then flush water through the dispenser to purge air and carbon fines; finish by resetting the filter indicator per the RF261BEAESR owner's manual.
- Install the new filter fully seated and locked in place.
- Dispense and discard several gallons of water (or run water for a few minutes) to clear air and loose carbon.
- If water sputters, keep dispensing until the flow is steady.
- Check for leaks around the filter head/housing after flushing.
- Reset the filter light using the control panel steps in the manual.
| Step | Soaking the filter | Flushing after install |
|---|---|---|
| Needed for most Samsung fridge filters | No | Yes |
| Purpose | Tries to wet media, reduce air | Purges air, clears carbon fines |
| Best practice for RF261BEAESR | Skip | Do it every filter change |
Skipping the flush can leave trapped air in the line and carbon particles in the first draws of water. Flushing protects taste and clarity, helps prevent sputtering, and confirms the filter is seated correctly.
If you still have slow flow or no water after flushing, focus on common causes:
- Household shutoff valve not fully open
- Kinked water supply line behind the refrigerator
- Low home water pressure
- Frozen water line in the door (common after very cold settings)
- A restriction in the filter housing (for housing-related issues, see how to replace the water filter in a Samsung refrigerator)
Last updated: February 2026
Is it okay to use a generic water filter in a Samsung refrigerator?
Yes, it’s usually okay to use a generic water filter in a Samsung RF261BEAESR refrigerator as long as it’s truly compatible and certified for chlorine and particulate reduction. The biggest risks with off-brand filters are poor fit, leaks at the housing, and reduced filtration performance; we recommend confirming certification and fit details in the RF261BEAESR owner’s manual.
- Certification: Look for NSF/ANSI 42 (taste, odor, chlorine) and ideally 53 (health-related contaminants) if you want broader filtration.
- Exact compatibility: Match the filter type your RF261BEAESR uses (don’t rely on “fits Samsung” alone).
- O-ring quality and fit: A loose or stiff seal can cause dripping or internal leaks.
- Water pressure and flow: Very restrictive filters can slow dispensing and affect ice maker fill.
- Change interval: Most refrigerator water filters are replaced about every 6 months (sooner with heavy use or poor water quality).
| Option | Pros | Cons | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Generic (certified) | Lower cost, often good performance | Fit and seal quality varies | Budget-focused households that verify certification and compatibility |
| OEM-style / premium compatible | More consistent fit, fewer leak complaints | Higher cost | Homes where leak prevention and consistent flow matter most |
- Turn off the water supply and remove the filter.
- Inspect the filter head and seals; re-seat the filter firmly.
- Flush several gallons of water to purge air and carbon fines.
- If leaking continues, stop using that filter and inspect the housing area; a damaged housing can require replacement such as the refrigerator water filter housing DA97-12664A.
A water filter that doesn’t seal correctly can drip into the fresh food compartment or damage the filter housing over time. A properly matched, certified filter protects taste, helps maintain normal dispenser flow, and supports reliable ice maker filling.
Related help: how to replace the water filter in a Samsung refrigerator
Last updated: February 2026
Is it really necessary to replace a refrigerator water filter?
Yes. For a Samsung RF261BEAESR bottom-mount refrigerator, replacing the water filter on schedule (typically about every 6 months) helps keep water tasting clean, maintains normal dispenser flow, and reduces the chance of clogs and odor-causing buildup in the filter and housing; see the RF261BEAESR owner's manual for your exact interval.
A used-up filter can restrict water flow and stop filtering effectively.
- Water tastes or smells off
- Slower water dispenser flow
- Smaller or hollow ice cubes (if your model uses filtered water for ice)
- Filter indicator stays on or comes back quickly after a reset
- Sediment can contribute to valve and housing issues over time
Most households do best with a time-and-symptom approach.
| Replace based on | Typical trigger | What you notice |
|---|---|---|
| Time | About every 6 months | No obvious symptoms yet |
| Usage | Heavy dispensing/large family | Flow drops sooner |
| Water quality | Hard water or sediment | Taste/odor changes sooner |
| Symptoms | Any time | Slow flow, odd taste, cloudy ice |
These steps help confirm the filter is the cause of low flow or taste issues.
- Dispense water for 1 to 2 minutes to purge air after any recent filter change
- Make sure the filter is fully seated and locked
- If flow is still slow, try dispensing with a fresh filter installed
- Inspect the filter housing area for leaks or cracks
- Follow the reset steps in the Samsung refrigerator filter light reset explained guide after replacement
A refrigerator water filter is a consumable part. Replacing it protects water quality and helps your Samsung refrigerator’s water system (filter housing, valves, and dispenser) operate at normal pressure and flow.
Last updated: February 2026





