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Samsung Dishwasher vs Viking Dishwasher

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Viking Dishwasher comes out ahead overall (2.5 vs 1.3), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Samsung DishwasherViking Dishwasher
Reliability & Durability 1.4 2.7
User Sentiment 0.4 2.5
Complaint Severity 6.8 6.8
Consensus Strength 0.6 1.7
Value for Money 0.6 0.0
Owner Advocacy 0.2 1.4
Samsung Dishwasher

These machines look sharp and run quietly for the first few years, then the wheels come off: drain pumps die around year five or six (stranding you mid-cycle with an OE code), rack joints rust out and shed prongs by year three, and replacement parts are either unavailable or absurdly expensive. Warranty service stretches into weeks-long sagas with multiple technician visits that rarely fix the problem the first time. Unless you plan to replace the unit every four years, skip this and buy a Bosch 500 or KitchenAid that will actually last through a mortgage.

Viking Dishwasher

Viking dishwashers combine luxury pricing with bottom-tier reliability, a rare feat in the appliance world. Consumer Reports ranks them among the worst dishwasher brands for 2026, and 90% one-star reviews point to systematic quality failures, but the real problem is parts support: dispenser units get discontinued mid-ownership, sometimes within weeks of failure, stranding owners with expensive dead weight. If you need the matching stainless for a Viking range, buy a Bosch or Miele and have it paneled; if you loved the old Asko-sourced Vikings, buy an Asko directly and save the markup.