Dryers for Sale at Kelly's: Find the Right Dryer for Your Oregon Home
A reliable dryer is what turns laundry from a chore into a routine. Kelly's has been a family-owned Oregon retailer since 1974, and our laundry category includes one of the largest dryer selections in the Willamette Valley and Southern Oregon, with gas dryers, electric dryers, heat pump dryers, ventless dryers, and matching dryers for laundry pairs.
Shop Dryers by Type
Dryers fall into three main types at Kelly's, and which one fits depends mostly on the hookups you have and how much you dry at a time.
- Electric Dryers: Run on a standard 240V outlet (or 120V on select ventless models) and are easier to install than gas because no gas line is required.
- Gas Dryers: Heat up faster and often cost less to run if natural gas is cheaper than electricity in your part of Oregon. Requires a gas hookup near the dryer.
- Portable Dryers: Compact, vent-free dryers built for spaces where a full-size dryer will not fit.
| Electric Dryers | Gas Dryers | Portable Dryers | |
| Install | 240V outlet, most need a vent (heat pump and condenser variants are ventless) | Gas hookup plus a vent |
|
| Capacity | Around 4.0 to 9.0 cu ft | Around 7.0 to 9.0 cu ft | Around 1.5 to 4.3 cu ft |
| Drying time | Standard | Fastest | Slower per load |
| Best for | Most Oregon homes with an existing dryer outlet and vent | Homes with a gas hookup that want the fastest cycles | Apartments, RVs, ADUs, dorms, and small laundry spaces |
What to Consider When Buying a New Dryer
Picking the right dryer comes down to four things: your hookups, your capacity needs, your venting situation, and the features that actually make a difference. Here is how each one shapes the decision.
Fuel Type and Hookups
Start with what you already have. If your laundry room has a 240V dryer outlet and no gas line, an electric dryer is the simpler swap. If you have a gas hookup, a gas dryer will heat up faster and typically cost less per cycle to run. Heat pump dryers usually run on a standard 120V outlet, which makes them the easiest install of any dryer type if you do not have a 240V circuit. Learn more about the difference between heat pump and condenser dryers on our blog.
Size and Capacity
Match your dryer capacity to your washer and your lifestyle. A washer in the 4.5 to 5.0 cubic foot range pairs with a dryer in the 7.0 to 7.4 cubic foot range. A family of five or larger or anyone drying king-size bedding regularly should look at 8.0 cubic feet or more. Undersized dryers are the single most common reason customers replace them within five years.
Ventilation
Most dryers require an external vent. Heat pump and condenser dryers do not, which makes them the right answer for condos, ADUs, and finished basements without a clean route to the outside. If you have an existing vent, have it cleaned before installing a new dryer. Lint buildup behind a vented dryer is the leading cause of dryer fires nationally.
Key Dryer Features to Look For
After type, the features below are what move the needle most for our dryer customers. Each one is a filter you can apply directly to this page to narrow the lineup to dryers that have it built in.
- Energy Star Dryers: Certified for lower energy use, which adds up on your utility bill, especially in households running multiple loads a week.
- High Efficiency Dryers: Models that use less energy per load, typically through heat pump or condenser technology, and moisture sensors that end the cycle as soon as clothes are dry. The smarter pick if you do a lot of laundry.
- Dryers with Steam Option: Refreshes garments without rewashing, reduces wrinkles on finished loads, and is one of the features customers say they would not give up once they have it.
- WIFI Enabled Dryers: Cycle alerts to your phone, remote start, lint filter reminders, and integration with smart home apps. Most useful in households where the dryer runs overnight or while you are out.
Oregon Hookup Notes from Our Team
A few Oregon-specific hookup details come up often enough to call out before you finalize a dryer pick.
- Gas dryer availability varies by city. Newer construction often has a gas stub in the laundry room. Older homes in Salem or Corvallis may not. If you are not sure, snap a photo of your laundry room and bring it in.
- Older homes and 120V dryer outlets. Many homes built before the 1960s in Salem and Corvallis were wired for a 120V outlet, not a 240V dryer circuit. Heat pump dryers can solve this without an electrician.
- Vent length and routing. Dryer vents should typically run no more than 25 feet with no more than two 90-degree bends. Longer or more complicated routes lead to long dry times and lint buildup. If your vent is too long, a heat pump or condenser dryer is a cleaner solution than re-routing the vent.
- ADU and condo restrictions. Many newer ADUs and condos in Eugene, Salem, and the Portland metro require ventless drying because there is no clean route for an exterior vent. If you are not sure what your building allows, check your HOA rules or building specs before shopping.
How Kelly's Helps You Choose a Dryer
Every Kelly's showroom puts the dryer lineup in front of you in person and pairs you with a no-pressure expert who knows the features in and out. Some of the questions we walk customers through include:
- What are your hookups? Fuel source and outlet decide the dryer type before anything else.
- What does your washer hold? The dryer capacity needs to roughly double the washer capacity for efficient drying.
- What features matter to you? Steam, sanitize, smart features, reversible door, or simply rugged reliability.
- Are you replacing or buying new? New installs may need plumbing or electrical work.
Find Your Next Dryer at Kelly's in Oregon
Picking the right dryer comes down to your hookups, the capacity you need, and how your space handles venting. Kelly's has been a family-owned Oregon retailer since 1974, with four showrooms in Salem, Corvallis, Eugene, and Central Point where you can see dryers 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 see the dryers in person.
Frequently Asked Questions: Dryers
What is the difference between an electric dryer and a gas dryer?
Is a gas dryer better than electric?
How do I know what size dryer I need?
Are ventless dryers more expensive?
Is a steam dryer worth it?
