Can you put a fridge freezer in a garage?

Keep-frozen If your fridge-freezer has developed a fault where the freezer has defrosted, or is not getting cold enough and it’s in a garage, and the temperature is very cold, it could just be that it isn’t suitable for putting in a garage..

.. A surprising number of fridge-freezers in the UK end up in a garage or in an outbuilding. However, did you know that many are not capable of running properly if the temperature surrounding the appliance drops too low?

When winter comes, many people find that their freezer starts to defrost. However, it’s also possible for unrelated faults to cause the freezer part of a fridge freezer to defrost or not get cold enough, so don’t automatically assume the cause is as described in this article


All refrigeration has what’s called a climate class rating, which states the minimum and maximum temperature the appliance is designed to work within. I believe the overwhelming majority of consumers have never heard of climate class so surely its the responsibility of retailers to advise customers about it when selling refrigeration?

Which fridge freezers can defrost in a garage?

Garage It’s combined fridge-freezers. If a combined fridge freezer has only one thermostat (or sensor), which is sited inside the fridge section, it is likely to be affected by this problem. If the ambient temperature of the room it’s placed in gets to around freezing, then the fridge thermostat is likely to shut off. When this happens on appliances with only one thermostat the freezer also shuts off. If the temperature remains cold for several hours then the fridge thermostat will not come back on.


It doesn’t need to because inside the fridge compartment will be plenty cold enough. In really cold weather it is possible for the fridge thermostat to stay off for a long time. Whilst ever the thermostat for the fridge remains off the compressor will stop running and the freezer will eventually start to warm up, at least to roughly the ambient temperature of the garage, which although cold, is not cold enough for frozen food.

As a rule of thumb I would say that if you can set separate temperatures for your fridge and the freezer section I would assume there are separate thermostats controlling the freezer and therefore this issue shouldn’t affect your appliance. (Article continues below..)


What about chest freezers?

Chest freezers should not suffer from this specific issue because they have their own thermostatic control and do not try to control the temperature of two separate compartments. However, if the temperature in the garage significantly exceeds that of its climate class it can’t be guaranteed to work without any issues. Also, if there is little ventilation and or condensation it can cause premature rust and even damage to components inside. I have seen many chest freezers in garages over the years that seem to fair reasonably ok although modern ones may not be so well built.

Is this a bad design? – Problems below 10 degrees?

Thermometer Manufacturers would say they design them to be installed in a kitchen. However, to me it does seem less than ideal to rely on only one sensor or stat to control two different parts of the appliance (just to save money). Many fridge freezers do have separate stats. As saving money is the only possible advantage I can think of it’s therefore presumably more likely to affect the cheaper range of fridge freezers.


Also, there are reports that many refrigeration appliances are not guaranteed to work properly if temperatures drop below 10 degrees centigrade. I would imagine many people have appliances in parts of their homes and even in some kitchens where the temperature can drop below 10 degrees during the night or – what about when on holiday in the winter when the heating may be left off or on low enough only to prevent freezing?

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If an appliance is installed in a kitchen and temperature drops during the night or holiday periods cause it problems I would say that’s a design issue. You cannot be expected to keep the heating on 24/7 to keep an appliance running. However, if installed in an out building or garage I would think you have much less of a claim other than why weren’t you asked at the point of sale where you would be installing the appliance?


What can be done about it?

A fridge freezer with only one thermostat operating inside the fridge compartment is not suitable to run in a particularly cold environments. If affected you need to either exchange it for a fridge freezer with two thermostats controlling the fridge and freezer independently, or swap it for a separate fridge and freezer, or you need to somehow stop the environment from getting below 4 °C (which is likely to be impractical).

Do I have any comeback if my fridge freezer doesn’t work in my garage?

Consumer rights The short answer is probably not, at least not with the manufacturer, you have placed it in an environment it is not designed for. If it was me I might be annoyed though that the person I bought it from did not enquire as to whether I intended to place it in a garage or not. I would argue this problem is in no way common public knowledge, but most retailers are well aware of it because they get called out to them all the time.


All manufacturers and aftersales engineers also know about this issue because they too get called out lots of times under guarantee and have to tell the customer there’s no “fault” on the appliance and it’s not covered under guarantee. Some might say it’s the responsibility of the shop you bought it from to advise at the point of sale that it is not suitable for fitting in a garage or other outbuilding because the companies (not necessarily individual sales staff) know that so many people place them there. I don’t know whether trading standards would agree or not.

At one time, Comet, one of the largest UK retailers of such appliances carried out a survey where they found that around 15% of call outs to fridge freezers were caused by them being placed incorrectly in a garage or another building subject to very cold temperatures. This being the case, I would have thought it common sense for all their sales staff to be instructed to ask any customer buying such a fridge freezer where they intended to site it but they never were.

This is not only in the customer’s interest but in the interest of the retailer as any customer affected by this problem is likely to be pretty upset about it. At the end of the day it’s unlikely that any retailer is legally obliged to check on these matters but personally I believe they should because it’s very common for people to site fridge freezers in their garage and they should know that.


If affected, is my appliance damaged, or will it recover if moved to somewhere warmer?

If the freezer is defrosting due to the room being so cold it switches off the thermostat inside the fridge – and the fridge freezer is only controlled with one thermostat in the fridge (no stat or sensor in the freezer) then no damage should be inflicted. The freezer has only stopped working because the fridge stat has stopped working. Once temperatures increase it should work normally again. However, make sure you don’t wrongly assume this is the cause of a defrosting freezer as of course faults can occur causing freezers to stop working too.

Could a fridge-freezer start to defrost in a kitchen during winter months if the heating isn’t on?

Winter This question has been asked a few times and I am presuming yes, there could be a problem if you have a fridge-freezer with only one thermostat controlling both the fridge and freezer and you go away on holiday when its cold. I’m not sure how most people do it, but normally when we go away we leave the heating off but we’ve never gone away in winter. If you went away and didn’t leave the heating on low (say around 14 – 15 degrees) then potentially during prolonged cold periods if the ambient temperature in the kitchen drops low enough (around 0 – 4 degrees C or colder) the fridge thermostat or sensor is likely to shut off as the temperature in the fridge becomes cool enough.


This won’t be an issue for the contents of the fridge because of course it’s reached the correct temperature. But if the freezer compartment is also controlled by the stat inside the fridge then this will stop the freezer coming on too. Therefore if the temperature remained cold enough to not require further cooling inside the fridge compartment then freezer compartment will not get any further cooling and after sufficient time has passed will start to thaw out.

The chances are if this did occur then unless you have an appliance with a warning light or sound to indicate the temperature of the freezer has warmed up enough to adversely affect the quality of the frozen food you might not realise the food has partially defrosted compromising its quality.

My advice would be that if you think you could be affected then if any food inside the freezers seems a little off when you thaw it out to use then throw it away. If you do have a fridge freezer that sounds or displays a warning if the temperature has been compromised you should assume the food has been partially defrosted even if it is rock solid when you come back.

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166 thoughts on “Can you put a fridge freezer in a garage?”

  1. Washerhelp says, January 20, 2012 at 1:21 pm

    > go away for a full month each Christmas and do not leave their heating on.

    That’s risky – the water pipes and the loos might freeze up. Most central heating systems have a “frost” setting, which should also take care of the fridge.

    Again, it is only the thermostat (whatever) that needs to be kept warm, in order to keep the fridge working.

    Perhaps they should run down their deep-freeze before going on holiday ?

  2. Hi Robin: I’d normally agree with your caveat but people are completely unaware of this design problem until they’ve already bought the appliance.

    Re the heating system my in-laws don’t have an affected appliance but they should leave the heating on to maintain temperature of at least 7- 10 degrees in my opinion. There are probably still people without central heating though..

  3. I’m from Dundee, so I was certainly not suggesting that people leave their CH off during winter holidays, but in my case, I use a frost setting. In order to check this, I have left a recording thermometer in the house and it has been as low as 5 deg C, which is fine for preventing cisterns or pipework freezing. It also saves a fortune in gas. However this would put the fridge freezers outwith their normal operating specifications, and risk shutting down the whole unit. I’m sorry Robin, but for the manufacturers to knowingly sell such equipment for the sake of saving £5 (production cost!) for an extra thermostat beggars belief. Maybe for the countries bordering the Med, it’s not a problem, but at the very least, where I live, there should be a prominent ‘health’ warning, splashed across the front of them,….and if it takes the Govt to do this, then so be it. I repeat,…”Keep your house heated so that your freezer stays cold!”,…you couldn’t make it up.

  4. I agree Andy. I think some say they can’t guarantee they’ll work properly below 14 degrees C which is easily the temperature of many peoples kitchens during the night or when away on holiday. The one sensor controlling two totally separate compartments with vastly differing temperature requirements is plain daft in my opinion.

  5. Bravo Andy!! (…and Washerhelp)… I couldn’t agree more.

    The limitations of these single thermostat fridge/freezers should be made CREAR by the manufacurers and retailers so that Joe Public (who has NO IDEA about these technical issues) won’t be duped into buying something wholely unsuitable.

  6. Hi,

    I have read this whole article and comment thread page and just want to check my understanding of this:

    Apart from the Beko models which have the frost guard technology and so operate in ambient temperatures of -15 you need to buy a twin thermostat fridge freezer if you want to keep it in the garage? However, all the twin thermostat models I have looked at say that they should be kept in rooms no colder than 10 degrees, so how can they be safely stored in a garage during winter if this is the manufacturers advice?

    Also, do all twin thermostat fridge freezers allow you to turn off the fridge (set the temperature high) to save energy when you are only using the freezer in the garage?

    Many Thanks!

  7. yes Victoria, only the Beko fridge freezers appear to be claiming to be suitable for a garage. If another brand has only one stat controlling fridge and freezer it will almost certainly fail in a garage when it gets cold. Freezer will defrost fully or partially. If it has separate stats it may work ok and shouldn’t suffer from the defrosting issue but not necessarily without any consequences or as efficiently as it otherwise would and would not be guaranteed by the manufacturer.

    You shouldn’t need to turn off the fridge. If it’s cold enough to not need the fridge running the fridge stat should prevent it running for you.

  8. Thanks very much!

    I was also wondering if ‘twin compressor’ is the same as ‘twin thermostat’ as I have seen a model which says it has two compressors in the write up, but I can only see the one single temperature control on it…I am assuming that the shop have it wrong unless thermostats and compressors are two separate things?


    [edit by Washerhelp] (Feb 2012) Sorry I missed answering this.

    As far as I’m aware an appliance with twin compressors should have their own sensors. The main issue here is fridge freezers with only one compressor controlling both the fringe compartment and the freezer compartment and only having one sensor in the fridge. As the fridge only needs to be around 2 – 5 degrees but the freezer needs to be at -18 degrees it seems pretty stupid.

  9. I can’t believe nobody has mentioned this yet!

    For a quick fix, grab the hairdryer and blast warm air onto the thermostat for 5 minutes.

    I looked through all the posts to see if this is a recommended practice, but hadn’t been mentioned anywhere in any of the forums I’ve googled.

    (You’re welcome)

  10. Following on from my post above, the reason for my “eureka moment” was due to my 14yr old fridge-freezer that resides in an outhouse (no room in the kitchen for a fridge would you believe!), not coming on for 4 days due to the recent freezing weather. The freezer bars that are usually clogged up with frost were bare and the bread (which we keep in the freezer and take out a slice at a time as we need it) was soft.
    It’s 2 hours after I gave it the hairdryer treatment and it’s still cooling down the freezer even though it’s currently -6c in the outhouse.

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