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GE Profile UltraFast Combo Washer Dryer vs LG WashCombo All-in-One Washer Dryer

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — GE Profile UltraFast Combo Washer Dryer (5.9) and LG WashCombo All-in-One Washer Dryer (6.2) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 GE Profile UltraFast Combo Washer DryerLG WashCombo All-in-One Washer Dryer
Reliability & Durability 5.0 6.7
User Sentiment 5.3 6.1
Complaint Severity 7.0 7.2
Consensus Strength 2.9 2.4
Value for Money 5.3 3.7
Owner Advocacy 5.8 5.9
GE Profile UltraFast Combo Washer Dryer

This all-in-one trades your time for floor space, and the exchange rate isn't great. You get genuine convenience: toss in a load, walk away for hours, come back to dry clothes without touching a vent or 240V outlet, perfect for condos and closet laundries where separate machines won't fit. Cycle times stretch to 2-5 hours, the lint filter clogs relentlessly despite self-cleaning promises, and clothes routinely finish damp. Motors grind out at two to three years, triggering $250-300 repairs even under warranty. If you have 48 inches of width, separate machines wash faster, dry better, and break cheaper.

LG WashCombo All-in-One Washer Dryer

A clever space-saver that turns square footage into hours. The ventless 2-in-1 design fits in a closet and needs only a standard outlet, ideal for condos or tight quarters, but the trade-off is brutal: cycles run three to six hours, and you can only dry half what you wash, so a full hamper becomes an all-day relay. Clothes sometimes finish damp, demanding a second round, and the heat-pump condenser needs regular filter cleaning that separate units don't. Buy it if you live alone, run two small loads a week, and have literally no room for stacked separates; skip it if you have kids, do laundry daily, or ever need jeans dry by tonight.