LG Dishwasher Door Gasket Replacement — What This Part Does
The door gasket is a continuous rubber seal that runs around the inside of the dishwasher door opening, creating a watertight barrier between the door and the tub when the door is closed. It keeps water inside during the wash and rinse cycles. Over time the gasket can dry out, become brittle, tear, or pull away from its channel, breaking the seal and allowing water to escape.
Common failure causes include normal wear from heat and detergent, the gasket drying and cracking, physical damage or tears in the rubber, debris or detergent buildup in the groove preventing proper seating, and incorrect installation with the gasket lip facing the wrong direction or not fully pressed into the channel. On some LG models a separate outer tub seal prevents leaks around the cabinet interface, but the door gasket itself is the front-line seal.
Signs It Needs Replacing
- Water leaking from the door perimeter during a cycle You see water dripping or pooling on the floor from around the edges of the closed door while the dishwasher is running.
- Visible cracks, tears, or gaps in the door seal The rubber gasket shows cracks, splits, or pulls away from the channel when you inspect it with the door open.
- Gasket feels dry, brittle, or hard to the touch The seal has lost its flexibility and feels stiff or crumbly instead of soft and pliable.
- Water pools under the dishwasher after use You find standing water on the floor or under the unit after cycles, even when no other visible leak source is present.
- Gasket has come loose or is misaligned in the channel The seal is no longer seated evenly around the door frame or has fallen out of the groove in spots.
- Detergent or food residue buildup in the gasket groove You see debris or dried detergent caked in the channel that prevents the gasket from seating tightly.
How to Replace It
- Disconnect electrical power to the dishwasher at the breaker or unplug the unit, and turn off the water supply valve under the sink or at the dishwasher connection.
- Open the dishwasher door fully and locate the existing door gasket in the channel around the inside perimeter of the door opening.
- Pull the old gasket out of the channel by hand, starting at one corner or the center top and working your way around the entire frame until the seal is completely removed.
- Clean the gasket channel thoroughly with a damp cloth to remove all detergent residue, food debris, and mineral buildup so the new gasket can seat properly.
- Start at the center top of the door opening and press the new gasket into the channel, making sure the lip or flange faces inward toward the tub, working your way evenly around both sides and the bottom.
- Work slowly around the entire perimeter, pressing the gasket firmly into the groove so it seats evenly with no gaps, twists, or bulges, and double-check alignment at corners.
- Close the door slowly and inspect the seal compression all the way around to confirm the gasket is not pinched, twisted, or sticking out of the channel.
- Restore power and water, then run a short rinse cycle and watch the door area for any leaks to verify the new gasket has stopped the water escape.
The Part You Need
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| LG dishwasher door gasket | Amazon | Check your model and serial number plate (inside the door edge or on the side frame) to confirm fitment. LG part 3920DD3005A is a common black rubber gasket approximately 76 inches long for many models. Some units may use part 3920DD3002D or require an outer tub seal (3920DD3002B) if the leak is from the tub-to-cabinet interface rather than the door itself. |
Related Error Codes
If this part is failing you may also see one of these codes:
- Lg Dishwasher Ae error code
- Lg Dishwasher Be error code
- Lg Dishwasher Ce error code
- Lg Dishwasher Cr error code
- Lg Dishwasher E1 error code
- Lg Dishwasher Fe error code
- Lg Dishwasher He error code
- Lg Dishwasher Ie error code
- Lg Dishwasher Le error code
- Lg Dishwasher Ne error code
When to Call a Pro
If you replaced the door gasket correctly and water still leaks from the door area, the problem may be a damaged outer tub seal, a cracked tub, a bent door frame, or a failed door latch that prevents full closure. Leaks coming from the sides or top of the door opening (not the door perimeter itself) usually point to the outer tub seal, which requires pulling the dishwasher out and accessing the tub lip. If you are not comfortable disconnecting water lines, pulling the unit from the cabinet, or diagnosing multiple leak sources, call a qualified appliance technician.