Whitegoods Help article

Reducing the Height of a Washing Machine

Washing Machine Dimensions
💡
Quick Answer

The safest way to reduce the height of a washing machine is to use an official height reduction kit from the manufacturer, which replaces the standard lid with a lower flat plate. Removing the feet can give a further small reduction, but removes the levelling adjustment. Removing the lid entirely without a replacement kit is not recommended and carries genuine safety risks.

How to Reduce the Height of a Washing Machine to Fit Under a Worktop

If your washing machine is a few millimetres or centimetres too tall to fit under a kitchen worktop, you have several options. This guide covers every method available, in order of recommendation, with honest guidance on which approaches are safe and which carry real risks.

First: Check Whether a Different Machine Would Simply Fit

Before modifying anything, it is worth checking whether a different washing machine would fit the space without modification. Standard washing machine heights vary very little between brands, with almost all models measuring 85cm tall. However, occasional models sit at 84cm or even marginally lower, and if your worktop clearance is only a few millimetres short, finding a slightly shorter model may be the simplest solution.

Check our washing machine sizes comparison guide which compares heights, widths, and depths across major brands. Also read our guide on washing machine sizes and associated problems for a fuller picture of how much variation actually exists between manufacturers.

If the difference is more than a few millimetres, a different machine is unlikely to solve the problem. The methods below are your best options.

Method 1: Height Reduction Kit (Recommended)

The safest and most effective way to reduce the height of a washing machine is to use an official height reduction kit from the manufacturer. These kits replace the standard lid with a lower, flat metal plate that maintains the machine’s integrity while reducing its overall height. The reduction available varies by brand and model, but is typically between 25mm and 30mm, which is often enough to solve a tight worktop situation.

✅ Why a height reduction kit is the right solution

A height reduction kit maintains all the protective functions of the original lid: it contains noise, protects internal electrical components from water ingress from above, prevents access to live parts, and provides fire containment if a fault develops internally. It is the solution the manufacturer designed for this exact situation.

How much height reduction is available?

Brand Kit type Height reduction Notes
Miele “Building-under kit” Approximately 25mm Miele-specific guide available. See link below.
Hotpoint Height reduction kit Approximately 30mm Available for selected models, typically £80 to £90
Indesit Flat lid accessory Varies by model Contact manufacturer directly to confirm availability
Beko Flat lid Varies by model Some models available without needing to remove lid
Other brands Varies Varies Check the manufacturer’s accessories page on their official website
⚠️
Availability is increasingly limited

Height reduction kits are not high-volume sellers and some manufacturers have stopped stocking them altogether. Always contact the manufacturer directly rather than a retailer to confirm current availability for your specific model. Miele calls their kit a “Building-under kit” and lists it under laundry accessories on their website.

How to find a height reduction kit for your machine

  1. Find your exact model number. The model number is on the rating plate inside the door rim. You need this to confirm kit compatibility. Read: how to find your appliance model number.
  2. Visit the manufacturer’s official accessories page. Search for your model number on the manufacturer’s website, then look for accessories or installation accessories. The height reduction kit or building-under kit should be listed there if it exists for your model. Find your manufacturer’s website via our washing machine user manuals page.
  3. Contact the manufacturer directly if you cannot find it online. Explain that you need a height reduction kit or building-under kit for a specific model number. Manufacturers can confirm availability more reliably than retailers. Do not ask a retailer, as they are unlikely to know.
  4. Search independent spare parts suppliers. If the manufacturer cannot supply a kit, independent spare parts suppliers sometimes carry old stock or compatible alternatives. Use our spare parts guide to find reputable UK suppliers. Search by your model number and “height reduction kit” or “building under kit”.

For Miele-specific guidance on the building-under kit and the height reduction available, read our dedicated guide: how to reduce the height of a Miele washing machine.

Method 2: Adjusting or Removing the Feet

All washing machines have adjustable levelling feet that screw in and out to allow the machine to sit level on an uneven floor. These feet are usually threaded into the base of the machine, and screwing them further in will lower the machine’s overall height.

Adjusting the feet (safest approach)

Most feet have a locking nut on the thread that prevents them from vibrating loose during the spin cycle. To get maximum reduction from the feet, unscrew each foot completely, remove the locking nut from the thread, refit the foot, and screw it all the way down. This typically gives an extra 4 to 5mm of height reduction compared to having the feet screwed out for levelling purposes.

The disadvantage is losing the ability to level the machine on an uneven floor. An unlevel machine vibrates more on spin, which increases wear and noise. If your floor is perfectly level, this may not matter. If it is uneven, reduced levelling ability will cause problems.

Removing the feet entirely (not recommended)

The feet also serve two other purposes beyond height adjustment: they protect the floor from scratching and they help prevent the machine from moving during the spin cycle. Removing them entirely risks scratching flooring and increased movement on spin. Vibration transmitted directly to the floor can also cause tiles to crack over time on certain floor types.

✅ What adjusting the feet achieves
Maximum reduction typically 20 to 30mm including the locking nut trick. Safe to do. Reversible. Maintains floor protection and anti-movement function. Recommended as a supplement to a height reduction kit.
❌ Risks of removing feet entirely
Loss of levelling ability. Risk of floor damage from the bare metal or plastic base. Increased movement on spin. Not reversible without replacement feet. Not recommended unless a small additional reduction is essential and the floor is perfectly flat.

Method 3: Removing the Lid (Not Recommended)

Removing the lid of a washing machine is the most tempting quick fix, as the lid is easy to remove on most machines and can reduce the height by anywhere from 5mm to 25mm depending on the lid design. However, this approach carries genuine and serious risks and is not something Whitegoods Help recommends.

🚫
Do not use a washing machine without a lid unless using an official manufacturer replacement kit

The lid is not just a cosmetic cover, it performs critical safety functions. Removing it creates risks that could result in injury, electrical damage, or fire.

🔊 Noise
The lid contains drum and motor noise during the wash and spin cycle. Without it, noise levels increase significantly, which is particularly problematic if the machine is in a kitchen or near living areas.
⚡ Electric shock risk
Removing the lid exposes internal electrical components through any gap between the machine and the worktop. Small fingers, pets, or dropped items could contact live parts. This is a serious and non-theoretical risk.
💧 Water damage risk
Without a lid, water from a worktop above, condensation from a kitchen, or a leak from a bathroom directly overhead can fall into the machine and short out expensive electrical components. This is a common and costly failure mode.
🔥 Fire risk
If a fault develops inside the machine and causes overheating or fire, the lid slows the spread and gives containment. Without it, smoke and flame can escape directly into the kitchen or living space, and increased oxygen supply makes any fire worse.

If you are considering removing the lid because a height reduction kit is unavailable, it is worth reconsidering whether a different machine, a worktop adjustment, or living with the constraint is preferable to the risks above.

What if None of These Options Work?

If your worktop clearance is insufficient even after all available height reductions have been applied, the practical alternatives are:

  • Have the worktop raised to standard height. This is the structurally correct solution, though it may require kitchen modification work. Standard UK kitchen worktop height is 900mm from the floor, and most washing machines are designed to sit with a small clearance below this.
  • Use the washing machine in a different location. A utility room, a garage, or a different part of the kitchen where standard worktop height is used may accept the machine without modification.
  • Buy a machine with a lower standard height. A small number of models from various brands measure 84cm rather than 85cm. Our washing machine sizes comparison identifies which brands occasionally produce shorter-than-standard models.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much can you reduce the height of a washing machine?

Using an official height reduction kit from the manufacturer, you can typically reduce the height by 25mm to 30mm. Adjusting the feet to their minimum position can give a further small reduction of 5 to 10mm. Removing the feet entirely gives the maximum mechanical reduction but is not recommended due to floor protection and levelling issues. Removing the lid entirely is possible but carries serious safety risks and is not recommended.

Can I use a washing machine with the lid removed?

No, not safely. The lid protects against electric shock by covering internal components, prevents water from above entering the machine, reduces noise significantly, and provides fire containment if a fault develops internally. Removing the lid without replacing it with an official height reduction kit creates all of these risks simultaneously. Use the machine with its lid unless you have an official replacement kit from the manufacturer.

What is a washing machine height reduction kit?

A height reduction kit is an official manufacturer accessory that replaces the standard lid of a washing machine with a lower, flat metal plate. This maintains all the protective functions of the original lid while reducing the overall height of the machine, typically by 25mm to 30mm depending on the brand and model. Miele calls their version a “building-under kit”. Some kits include replacement feet or wheels to lower the machine further.

Which washing machine brands offer a height reduction kit?

Hotpoint, Miele, Indesit, and some Beko models have offered height reduction kits at various times. However, availability has become more limited as these kits are low-volume products. The best approach is to contact the manufacturer directly with your specific model number to confirm current availability. Do not rely on a retailer for this information. Check our dedicated guide for Miele: reducing the height of a Miele washing machine.

My washing machine is a few millimetres too tall. What should I do?

First check whether a different machine with a marginally lower profile would fit. Most machines are 85cm tall but occasional models measure 84cm. If buying new, compare heights across brands using our sizes comparison guide. If you already own the machine, try adjusting the feet to their minimum position using the locking nut trick described above, which can give 4 to 5mm of additional clearance. If you still need more, look for a height reduction kit for your specific model.

Can removing the washing machine feet cause problems?

Yes. The feet protect the floor, prevent the machine from moving during spin, and allow you to level the machine on an uneven floor. Removing them increases vibration, risks floor damage, and can cause the machine to move progressively during the spin cycle. If you do remove the feet, ensure the floor is perfectly level and check regularly that the machine has not moved. Replacing the feet later is possible but requires sourcing the correct replacement feet for your model.

What is the standard height of a UK washing machine?

The standard height for almost all UK washing machines is 85cm (850mm). Very occasionally, a model will measure 84cm. Width is almost universally 60cm and depth varies more, typically between 52cm and 64cm depending on the model. Standard UK kitchen worktop height is 90cm from the floor, which should give 5cm of clearance for a standard-height machine. When this clearance has not been achieved during kitchen fitting, a height reduction kit or feet adjustment is usually the solution.

Last reviewed: April 2025. Guidance from Whitegoods Help engineers with over 40 years of appliance repair experience.

Discussion

41 Comments

Grouped into 24 comment threads.

Margaret Humphreys 3 replies Thanks for the advice Andy. The locking nut on the Bosch that I bought seems to be about 1/2" which might just about do it, however, Currys are due to pick it up today for refund! might have to re-purchase it! John Lewis probably seem a better option, as Currys staff don't seem to be able to offer decent advice. Electra seem to be shorter overall, about 84.5cm , do you happen to know if the locking nuts would be the same size? Sorry to be a pain!

Thanks for the advice Andy. The locking nut on the Bosch that I bought seems to be about 1/2″ which might just about do it, however, Currys are due to pick it up today for refund! might have to re-purchase it! John Lewis probably seem a better option, as Currys staff don’t seem to be able to offer decent advice. Electra seem to be shorter overall, about 84.5cm , do you happen to know if the locking nuts would be the same size? Sorry to be a pain!

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to Margaret Humphreys

Hi Margaret. I would expect washing machine feet and threads and nuts to all be quite similar but there will be differences. Half an inch seems very large. I would expect most locking nuts on washing machine feet to be about 5 or 6 mm.

Steve Fitzhenry

Likely replying to Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Hi Andy – just replacing my washer and have a height issue. I know a Beko will fit without removing the lid but wanted to find out which manufactures supply the flat metal plate accessory – would you happen to know.

If no luck it looks like its a Beko

Cheers

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to Steve Fitzhenry

Hi Steve, yes it’s not recommended to use a washing machine without the lid. It exposes potential electric shock issues, electrical shorting out if water ran into it from a worktop above and a fire safety issue if the washing machine caught fire. You would need to contact Beko directly. You can find them on my appliance manuals page.

Samantha 3 replies Hi there, we have had new flooring put into our house. Unfortunately no-one realised the appliances would no longer fit under the worktops which i believe are fitted quite low! The machine is an Indesit WIXL123 and the previous owner must have already removed the feet as there are only felt pads there now so no option to do anything there! Ive had no joy from Indesit regarding a lid or height restriction kit - they no longer make them. Is there anything i can do? Can i get a low level lid from another brand and place it on top to at least keep it covered? or will the worktop alone be enough of a cover if i remove lid? I'm out of ideas! Thanks!

Hi there, we have had new flooring put into our house. Unfortunately no-one realised the appliances would no longer fit under the worktops which i believe are fitted quite low! The machine is an Indesit WIXL123 and the previous owner must have already removed the feet as there are only felt pads there now so no option to do anything there! Ive had no joy from Indesit regarding a lid or height restriction kit – they no longer make them. Is there anything i can do? Can i get a low level lid from another brand and place it on top to at least keep it covered? or will the worktop alone be enough of a cover if i remove lid? I’m out of ideas! Thanks!

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to Samantha

Hello Samantha. I describe reducing height of a washing machine without height reduction kit in my article above. It lists the disadvantages of not using a lid, one of which is potential fire hazard. If the new flooring is tiled I would consider removing tiles from underneath. Alternatively you would probably be able to fit built-in appliances underneath, though that obviously is a very expensive option. If it will only fit underneath without a lid then any high reducing lid should do the job as long as it fits, and as long as nothing metal on the underside of the lid touches any electrical parts.

Margaret Humphreys

Likely replying to Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Hi Andy,
Like everyone else on here I’m having trouble fitting a new washing machine under re-fitted lower work tops. If I manage to remove the locking nuts from the feet, how will this affect the stability of the machine? Or how easy would it be to remove and fit a height reduction top, assuming I can find one?

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to Margaret Humphreys

Hello Margaret. The locking nuts are arguably non-essential. Removing them will allow the feet to be screwed in further to a depth equal to the size of the locking nut. Their job is to help stop the feet from unscrewing or screwing further in caused by movement of the washing machine. If you remove the locking nuts and screw all of the feet completely in then I can’t see any problem whatsoever.

On the other hand if you have had to adjust the feet on your washing machine to accommodate a slightly uneven floor and therefore have some feet screwed in at different levels then removing the locking nuts may result in the washing machine occasionally moving away from being evenly balanced if one or more of the feet loses its position. This of course would not be a major problem for most people and might just need occasional readjustment.

John Johnstone 3 replies I have just purchased a Bosch washing machine (8kg) and height reduction kit (kit for just over £40). This will reduce the height from 85 am to around 82-82.5 cm. Very few other companies still do height reduction kits. Most Bosch washing machines have that option (but not all). If you need a 8kg (or more) washing machine they are all a standard 85 cm in height now, and if you don't have that space my advice would be to go for a Bosch. Have a look at John Lewis, ao.com and Currys for their models and then phone Bosch directly with the models you are looking at and then ask them if they have height reduction kits available. If they do, order the kit directly from Bosch. I've been told they are easy to fit- just a few screws. Hope this helps someone save some time!!

I have just purchased a Bosch washing machine (8kg) and height reduction kit (kit for just over £40). This will reduce the height from 85 am to around 82-82.5 cm.

Very few other companies still do height reduction kits. Most Bosch washing machines have that option (but not all).

If you need a 8kg (or more) washing machine they are all a standard 85 cm in height now, and if you don’t have that space my advice would be to go for a Bosch. Have a look at John Lewis, ao.com and Currys for their models and then phone Bosch directly with the models you are looking at and then ask them if they have height reduction kits available. If they do, order the kit directly from Bosch. I’ve been told they are easy to fit- just a few screws. Hope this helps someone save some time!!

Andy Trigg

Likely replying to John Johnstone

Thanks John, that’s useful. If anyone is buying please consider using the links on my buy appliances page which really helps to keep my advice and this site running.

Allison Glover

Likely replying to Andy Trigg

Hi Andy I’ve bought an Electrolux black free standing washer 914530239 and it won’t fit under my work top. I’ve read your advice and I’ve searched for a height reduction kit or flat top for it but to no avail. Can you help please?

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to Allison Glover

Hello Allison. You need to directly ask Electrolux, few other people will stock these kits as there’s very little demand for them. Only if Electrolux say they don’t make one will you know they aren’t available. If that is the case the only option is to see if you could make another kit fit somehow but Electrolux are the people you need to get advice from. You can find their web site on my here – instruction manual pages

debbie Barnett 2 replies Hi thank you for response. I did ask for any washing machine avail that came with option to replace lid with the height reduction kit. Any suggestions? You mentioned Indesit ? Do you know of a model that is compatible with the reduction lid? many thanks

Hi thank you for response.
I did ask for any washing machine avail that came with option to replace lid with the height reduction kit.
Any suggestions? You mentioned Indesit ? Do you know of a model that is compatible with the reduction lid?
many thanks

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to debbie Barnett

Hello Debbie. The link that I put in my last comment goes to height reduction kits for Hotpoint washing machines. However, if you have asked Hotpoint if they have any washing machines with a height reduction kit available and they have said no then presumably those height reduction kits might just be for older models. To be honest I wouldn’t be surprised if all manufacturers have stopped making height reduction kits but I don’t know if that is the case or not. Make sure you have asked the manufacturer and not a retailer.

I have another article where someone found a height reduction kit for a Miele washing machine (reducing the height of a Miele washing machine) but the problem there is that the cheapest Miele washing machine is likely to be £600.

The height of the washing machine is one of the most consistent measurements stuck to by manufacturers. All of the washing machines I have investigated are 85 mm high. There were just three or four that were slightly smaller but literally a maximum of 1 mm smaller. Check out this article to get an idea of which brand might be 84 mm high – washing machine sizes comparison chart however it does not give model numbers, only brands.

If you think removing the lid would be enough then maybe just removing the feet instead might be enough? Although make sure to read my advice about removing the feet in this article above.

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to debbie Barnett

Hi Debbie. I’ve just discovered that Miele called their height reduction kit a, “Building‑under kit”. Also I found this information on their website under laundry appliance accessories. As I said before, a Miele washing machine is probably too expensive but if you haven’t done so already I would go to each washing machine manufacturers website and seek out their accessories webpage which should list all accessories available for their washing machines. If there is a replacement lid that is much thinner, or a full height reduction kit it should be there. If none of them have anything listed there then I think it’s fair to say they probably do not make them any more.

PATRICK O KANE. 2 replies Hi,Has anybody removed the feet of a washing machine, and if so did the washing machine work ok. I only need a few MM for to let the machine in the whole way. My work top is granite so I am afraid to try a raise it in case it breaks. Looking forward to a reply.

Hi,Has anybody removed the feet of a washing machine, and if so did the washing machine work ok.
I only need a few MM for to let the machine in the whole way.
My work top is granite so I am afraid to try a raise it in case it breaks.
Looking forward to a reply.

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to PATRICK O KANE.

Hello Patrick. I mention removing feet in my article. It’s not ideal. If there’s a proper height reduction kit available it would be much better. You’d have to ask the manufacturer.

Siobhan Fox 1 reply Hi, just come across your article, hope anyone can help, my washing machine, an integrated Hoover was put as part of new kitchen, 4 years ago, had a repair yesterday, it was the filter, so not a problem, took the plinth off, bit engineer says we will have a problem getting machine out at the work top plinth covers the top of washing messaging but about 2cm,

Hi, just come across your article, hope anyone can help, my washing machine, an integrated Hoover was put as part of new kitchen, 4 years ago, had a repair yesterday, it was the filter, so not a problem, took the plinth off, bit engineer says we will have a problem getting machine out at the work top plinth covers the top of washing messaging but about 2cm,

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Hi. If the worktop was fitted over the washing machine, and it won’t come out, then it may be trapped. The only solution would be to remove the worktop. If the washing machine was installed with the worktop already fitted (as most are) then if it went in it should come out.

However, a more common scenario is when flooring or tiles are fitted up to the washing machine after it has been fitted. If there is no headroom for the washing machine to be lifted up and over, then it is trapped – washing machine trapped behind flooring

debbie Barnett 1 reply hi, please can you help. Countertop issue like everyone else so need to buy washing machine i can take lid off to reduce height. i cannot find one that has a flat lid replacement part anymore??? i’ve called everyone !! i don’t mind size model .. anything at this stage. Any suggestions ???

hi,
please can you help.
Countertop issue like everyone else so need to buy washing machine i can take lid off to reduce height.
i cannot find one that has a flat lid replacement part anymore???
i’ve called everyone !!
i don’t mind size model .. anything at this stage. Any suggestions ???

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to debbie Barnett

Hello Debbie. Have you asked for a height reduction kit? If you haven’t asked for a height reduction kit it might be possible that you were given bad information if you just asked for a washing machine where you can take the lid off. You can buy a few from Spares4Appliances – height reduction kits but they are only for Hotpoint washing machines and they are £80-£90.

If possible it would be a lot better in the long run to just have the height of the kitchen worktop raised to the proper standard height, though I do appreciate that it might either be extremely difficult or virtually impossible. Did you read my article that gives tips about removing the feet? That can give you potentially enough height reduction on its own.

Tim 1 reply Hey, I have recently had a new floor fitted in kitchen and my washing machine only just fits under worktop (work top stopping it from vibrating) is it possible to completely unscrew legs and sit on a piece of lino/carpet as this will give the clearance I need? Or should I just leave as it is. Many thanks.

Hey, I have recently had a new floor fitted in kitchen and my washing machine only just fits under worktop (work top stopping it from vibrating) is it possible to completely unscrew legs and sit on a piece of lino/carpet as this will give the clearance I need? Or should I just leave as it is. Many thanks.

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to Tim

Hello Tim. You could try. But removing the feet is usually part of the procedure when fitting a height reduction kit and I would expect the feet to be replaced by something else (thin) to help stop it scratching the floor and moving around during spin.

Trevor Turner 1 reply It may prove useful to advise that I have contacted several of the main retail outlets to ask if reduction kits are available via their links with manufacturers and none were agreeable to pursue. Consequently, I have e-mailed the leading brand manufacturers to request details of which models have these kits attainable via accessory purchase. I'll post these details if responses are forthcoming.

It may prove useful to advise that I have contacted several of the main retail outlets to ask if reduction kits are available via their links with manufacturers and none were agreeable to pursue. Consequently, I have e-mailed the leading brand manufacturers to request details of which models have these kits attainable via accessory purchase. I’ll post these details if responses are forthcoming.

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp)

Likely replying to Trevor Turner

Thanks Trevor. It’s not something most retailers are interested in because presumably there’s little or not profit in stocking them. It’s only a very small minority of people that ever need them. I think the manufacturer of an appliance may be the better option for advice and even ordering them from although when you are looking to buy it would be very useful if retailers could advise if they are available, how much they reduce the height and how much they cost.

Andy Trigg (Whitegoodshelp) 0 replies For a quick and easy way to find most of the major washing machine manufacturers official websites I have them all listed on this page washing machine user manuals

For a quick and easy way to find most of the major washing machine manufacturers official websites I have them all listed on this page washing machine user manuals

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