Key Takeaways

  • Samsung dominates the Ugandan fridge market with more models and better parts availability
  • LG offers Digital Inverter Compressors with 10-year warranty on the motor
  • Samsung's stabiliser coolpack is more practical for Uganda's voltage fluctuations
  • For most families, Samsung is the safer bet unless you specifically want LG's inverter warranty
Samsung and Hisense refrigerators for sale in Uganda

The Two Names That Matter

When Ugandans shop for a fridge, two brands come up first: Samsung and LG. Both are Korean, both make excellent appliances, and both have service centres in Kampala. Choosing between them comes down to a few practical differences that matter more in Uganda than anywhere else.

Samsung sells more fridges in Uganda than any other brand. The RT26 and RT28 series are everywhere, from Game to downtown dealers. Parts are abundant, technicians know them inside out, and every spare part shop on Kampala Road stocks Samsung components. That ubiquity matters when something breaks.

LG's Inverter Advantage

LG counters with its Digital Inverter Compressor, backed by a 10-year warranty on the motor. These compressors adjust their speed based on cooling demand rather than switching on and off. The result: lower electricity bills and quieter operation. In a country where power costs are high, that efficiency adds up over years.

The catch: LG has fewer models in the Ugandan market and fewer service points outside Kampala. If you live in Jinja, Mbarara, or Gulu, getting an LG repaired may mean a trip to Kampala or a long wait for a technician. Samsung's wider network is a genuine advantage outside the capital.

Which One to Buy

For most Ugandan families, Samsung is the practical choice. More models at more price points, wider service coverage, and the stabiliser coolpack on the RT series handle voltage dips well. If you have stable power, care deeply about energy bills, and live in Kampala, LG's inverter fridges are excellent. Pick the one with a service centre closest to you.