The Mercury News

Food is spoiling while Best Buy gives the runaround on LG fridge

- Christophe­r Elliott Columnist Christophe­r Elliott’s latest book is “How to Be the World’s Smartest Traveler” (National Geographic). You can get real-time answers to any consumer question on his forum, elliott.org/

QBest Buy sold me a defective LG refrigerat­or in 2016 with a Geek Squad protection plan. Instead of helping me, Best Buy referred me to LG. After dozens of phone calls, and after a refrigerat­or technician stood me up and then reschedule­d, LG diagnosed the problem as a defective compressor.

I am currently without a working fridge. I’ve contacted Best Buy multiple times and complained to the Better Business Bureau.

I’d like to exchange the refrigerat­or for one with a working compressor. I would prefer a different brand instead of having to hope the compressor doesn’t die again and put me through all this again and again for the next 10 years.

I don’t want to wait for another month to go through LG when I bought it from Best Buy. I want a fridge in my home now. I want reimbursem­ent for the actual loss of food and costs of ice, and meals out while I wait for them to live up to their agreement.

Could you help me?

— Jane Weir, Middletown, Maryland

ABest Buy sold you a refrigerat­or that doesn’t work, along with an expensive warranty, and then punted to the manufactur­er when you had a problem? Welcome to the wacky world of electronic­s retailing.

Best Buy buries the terms and conditions of its extended Geek Squad warranty on its site. They’re worth reviewing before you buy your next appliance or say “yes” to the Geek Squad. (Note: I couldn’t find the terms of your 2016 purchase, but they are similar.)

Why read all the fine print before you end up with a refrigerat­or that doesn’t work? Because it fully describes the coverage you are — and aren’t — getting. The biggest takeaway: Many of your Geek Squad coverages begin when the manufactur­er’s warranty ends. So, if LG covered your refrigerat­or under its warranty, Best Buy had to go through LG for a repair first.

For you, the most important part of the warranty was the replacemen­t credit. If your appliance stops working, Best Buy appears to limit you to a $750 credit for a new refrigerat­or.

As is so often the case with warranty cases, there’s what’s written

— and there’s the right thing to do. Best Buy seems to be following its warranty terms. But the right thing to do, in terms of customer service, is to find you a working refrigerat­or. Quickly.

You could have appealed this to someone higher up at the company. I list the names, numbers and email addresses of the Best Buy customer service executives on my nonprofit consumer advocacy site, Elliott.org.

I contacted Best Buy on your behalf. It approved a swap-out of your nonworking refrigerat­or.

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