All-in-One & Stacked Washer Dryers for Sale in Oregon
Combination laundry covers two compact answers to the same problem: how to fit a full washer and dryer into a small space. Kelly's has been a family-owned Oregon retailer since 1974, and our combination laundry models are part of a full laundry lineup of washers and dryers. Both designs save floor space without giving up the work of a full-size laundry pair, which is why they show up in Oregon apartments, condos, ADUs, in-law suites, RVs, garage conversions, and tiny homes more than anywhere else.
Who Should Buy a Washer Dryer Combo?
Combination laundry is designed for households where a full-size laundry pair will not fit and where hang-drying is not a backup plan. The drying piece matters more in Oregon than most places, since our wet season runs October through May and indoor air-drying slows to a crawl at our humidity levels. Most buyers fall into one of these groups:
- Condo and apartment owners. Some properties around Oregon lack standard exterior dryer vents due to building layouts or efficiency designs. For these households, a ventless combo is a practical way to get laundry functionality directly in-unit without structural modifications.
- ADU and tiny home builders. Accessory dwelling units are popping up across Lane, Marion, Linn, and Jackson counties. A combo gives you full laundry in a 27-inch or smaller footprint.
- RV and tiny home full-timers. Combos handle laundry on a 120V outlet, no propane, no vent, no dedicated 240V circuit.
- Anyone renovating without space for a separate dryer. Galley kitchens, basement laundry corners, and converted closets are common Kelly's customer use cases.
- Vacation rental and Airbnb owners. A single-unit appliance simplifies the laundry process for guests and reduces initial costs for owners. Because most combos are ventless, you eliminate the risk of lint buildup in exterior ducting, which is a leading safety concern in high-turnover properties.
- Anyone who wants to skip the laundry shuffle. Wash and dry runs as one cycle. You load it, you walk away, and you come back to dry clothes.
Shop Combination Laundry by Type
Combination laundry comes in two design types at Kelly's, and which one fits depends on your space, your hookups, and how fast you need a wash and dry to finish.
- All-in-One Combo: An all-in-one combo is a single-drum appliance that washes and dries the same load in one cycle, with no vent required. It is the smallest-footprint laundry design we sell and the right pick for spaces where there is no realistic vent option.
- Stacked Compact Wash Tower: A stacked compact wash tower (also referred to as a wash tower, laundry tower, or stacked laundry) is an integrated single column with a compact washer on the bottom and a compact dryer on top. It dries faster than a 2-in-1 and gives you more usable capacity per load, which makes it the better daily driver when you have the vertical clearance.
| All-In-One Combo | Stacked Laundry/Wash Tower | |
| How it works | One drum washes and dries the same load. | An integrated vertical tower with a dedicated washer on the bottom and a dedicated dryer on top. |
| Footprint | Single unit, 24 to 27 inches wide. | Single column, 24 to 27 inches wide. |
| Capacity | 2.4 to 5.0 cu ft total, shared by wash and dry. | 2.4 to up to 5.0 for the washer and 8.0 cu ft on the dryer side. |
| Cycle time | Long. 2 to 4 hours for a full wash plus dry. | Standard. 45 to 90 minutes total when running wash and dry back to back. |
| Vent required | No. Ventless drying is built in. | Model dependent. Kelly's offers traditional vented versions as well as ventless heat pump models. |
| Power | 120V or 240V, depending on the model. | 120V plus 240V on electric units, or 120V plus a gas hookup on gas units. |
| Best for | Tightest spaces, no vent possible, single-occupant or couple households. | Faster cycles and more usable capacity per load, in the same compact footprint. |
How Does a 2-in-1 Washer Dryer Combo Work?
Inside a combo, the same drum washes and dries. Once the wash cycle finishes, the unit shifts into dry mode and pulls moisture out of the load using one of two technologies:
- Heat pump drying: A closed refrigeration loop extracts moisture at lower temperatures. Gentler on fabrics, more energy efficient, and runs cooler than condenser models. Powers the LG WashCombo and GE Profile UltraFast Combo, among others.
- Condenser drying: Moist drum air passes across a cool surface, condenses into a drain line or reservoir, and dry air recirculates back into the drum. Simpler, less expensive up front, runs warmer than heat pump.
Kelly’s Favorite Washer/Dryer Combo Brands
Our combination laundry lineup includes models from the brands customers ask for by name.
- LG Laundry Combos: LG's combo lineup is anchored by the LG WashCombo, a 5.0 cubic foot 2-in-1 with heat pump drying and AI fabric sensing. The largest single-drum capacity in the category, and the model most often replacing aging stacked sets in condos.
- GE Laundry Combos: GE Profile's combo lineup is built around speed. The UltraFast Combo runs a full wash-plus-dry cycle in roughly two hours, the fastest in the 2-in-1 category. Heat pump drying, Wi-Fi, and smart cycle alerts come standard.
- Whirlpool Laundry Combos: Whirlpool's combo lineup is the value play. Smaller capacity, reliable performance, the right fit for ADUs, second homes, and rental properties.
- Samsung Laundry Combos: Samsung's combo lineup leans on smart features and AI cycle selection at a competitive price point. A strong fit for households already in the Samsung ecosystem.
Oregon Install Notes for Combo Washer Dryer Units
Washer dryer combos are usually simpler to install than a standard laundry pair, but a few Oregon-specific details come up often enough to call out.
- Many combos plug into a standard 120V outlet. The LG WashCombo and several GE Profile units do not require a 240V dryer outlet, which means no electrician visit in most older Salem and Corvallis homes.
- No vent means more install options. Combos work in basement corners, hall closets, ADUs above garages, and condos where venting was never installed.
- You still need water hookups. Cold water inlet, hot water inlet (most models), and a drain. Our Kelly's install team handles the connections as part of the delivery if your hookups are in place.
- HOA and condo association rules. If you are in a managed building, check whether your HOA requires water shut-off valves with leak detection.
Finding the Best 2-in-1 Laundry at Kelly’s
Combos are not for everyone, and our showroom team is direct about that. We will steer you toward a stacked pair or laundry tower if you have the vent, the outlet, and the room for one. We will steer you toward a combo if you have a real space constraint, a vent restriction, or a single-occupant load profile. The three questions we ask first:
- How many loads per week? Two to four loads a week is a great fit for a combo. Six or more starts to feel slow.
- Do you have a 240V outlet and a dryer vent? If yes, you have more options. If no, a combo is likely the right pick.
- How much do you care about cycle time? Combos run longer than separates. If that is a deal-breaker, we will say so.
Find Your Combination Laundry Unit at Kelly's
Picking the right combination laundry unit comes down to space, hookups, and how your household uses the dryer side. Kelly's has been a family-owned Oregon retailer for more than 40 years, with four showrooms in Salem, Corvallis, Eugene, and Central Point where you can see combination laundry in person, talk through your space with no pressure, and back every purchase with our Price Match Guarantee and optional Allstate Protection Plans.
Browse the lineup above, contact our team online, or stop by any of our Oregon appliance showrooms to find the right unit for your space.
Frequently Asked Questions: Combination Laundry
Do all-in-one washer dryers work?
How long does a 2-in-1 washer dryer cycle take?
Do you need a vent for an all-in-one washer dryer combo?
Can you stack any washer and dryer?
How tall are wash towers and laundry towers?
