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LG WashCombo All-in-One Washer Dryer vs LG WT7305 Top Load Washer

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
LG WashCombo All-in-One Washer Dryer comes out ahead overall (6.2 vs 5.8), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 WashCombo All-in-One Washer DryerWT7305 Top Load Washer
Reliability & Durability 6.7 5.0
User Sentiment 6.1 6.3
Complaint Severity 7.2 7.3
Consensus Strength 2.4 3.1
Value for Money 3.7 2.3
Owner Advocacy 5.9 6.0
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.

LG WT7305 Top Load Washer

This is LG's attempt to split the difference between old-school agitator washers and modern smart features, and it mostly works until it doesn't. The 4.8 cubic foot tub swallows king comforters, the agitator scrubs like the machines your parents remember, and TurboWash3D cuts cycle times, but control boards and spin bearings fail on 2-3 year old units with alarming regularity, then you wait weeks for LG warranty service to show up with parts that may not be in stock. Some owners hit a decade of trouble-free service; others face a torn agitator fin or dead inlet valve before the third anniversary. Buy it if you need the capacity and refuse to trust an impeller, but budget for repairs and accept that this isn't the indestructible tank from 1987.