GE Dryer Drive Belt Replacement — What This Part Does
The drive belt wraps around the drum and motor pulley to transfer torque from the motor and spin the drum during the dry cycle. On many GE dryers, belt tension also activates an idler switch in the motor circuit, so a broken or slipped belt can prevent the machine from starting or cause start-and-stop behavior depending on the model.
Belts fail from normal wear, cracking, glazing, and stretching over time. Mechanical overload from seized drum rollers, a damaged idler pulley, or a dragging drum can also snap or fray the belt prematurely. Excessive lint buildup and poor airflow increase cabinet heat and speed up belt deterioration.
Signs It Needs Replacing
- Drum won’t spin but motor runs The motor hums or runs normally but the drum stays stationary because the belt is no longer transferring torque.
- Dryer won’t start at all On models with an idler-tension switch, a broken belt releases tension and opens the switch, cutting power to the motor.
- Visible cracks, fraying, or glazing on the belt Direct inspection shows the belt surface is cracked, threads are exposed, or the rubber is shiny and slipping.
- Belt is off-track or hanging loose The belt has slipped off the drum groove or idler pulley and no longer engages the motor pulley.
- Intermittent start-and-stop during the cycle The belt slips or partially breaks, causing the idler switch to open and close as tension fluctuates.
- Drum rotates freely by hand with no resistance When you spin the drum manually, there is no drag from the motor because the belt is broken or completely off.
How to Replace It
- Unplug the dryer from the wall outlet or shut off the circuit breaker.
- Remove the access panels or front/top cabinet panels per your model’s design to expose the drum and belt assembly.
- Inspect the existing belt for breaks, cracks, fraying, or slippage off the drum or pulleys.
- Manually rotate the drum and check for binding, roughness, or wobble that indicates bad drum rollers, bearings, or a seized idler pulley.
- Inspect the idler pulley and tensioner for wear, drag, or damage, and check the idler switch (if equipped) to confirm it changes state when tension is applied and released.
- Remove the broken or loose belt from the drum, motor pulley, and idler.
- Route the new belt around the drum (with the ribbed side against the drum), then loop it under the idler pulley and around the motor pulley according to your model’s belt diagram.
- Rotate the drum by hand to confirm smooth rotation, proper belt tracking, and correct tension with no rubbing noise.
- Reassemble all cabinet panels and hardware, restore power, and run a test cycle to verify drum rotation and normal startup.
The Part You Need
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| GE dryer drive belt | Amazon | Find your exact belt part number on the model and serial plate inside the door opening or on the rear panel, then cross-reference it with GE or aftermarket suppliers. |
| Idler pulley or tensioner | Amazon | Replace if worn, seized, or if the old belt shows signs of drag or damage from pulley contact. |
Related Error Codes
If this part is failing you may also see one of these codes:
When to Call a Pro
Call a pro if you find evidence of drum-bearing failure, severe wobble, or motor-pulley damage during your inspection. If the dryer still won’t start after belt replacement and you’ve confirmed the idler switch and door switch are functioning, the issue may involve thermal fuses, control-board logic, or wiring that requires diagnostic tools and experience. Also call a pro if your model requires cabinet disassembly beyond simple panel removal or if you are uncomfortable working inside the dryer cabinet.