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Sewing Machine Repair in Virginia

36 services across 24 cities.

Alexandria (1)

Bon Air (1)

Chesapeake (1)

Danville (1)

Fairfax (2)

Falls Church (2)

Fredericksburg (2)

Hampton (2)

Haynesville (1)

Manassas (1)

Midlothian (1)

Newport News (1)

North Chesterfield (1)

Poquoson (1)

Portsmouth (1)

Richmond (6)

Roanoke (2)

Salem (1)

Vienna (1)

Virginia Beach (1)

Waynesboro (1)

Williamsburg (3)

Winchester (1)

Woodstock (1)

Also explore in Virginia

QuiltMap also lists these quilting-adjacent businesses across Virginia:

Top cities for sewing machine repair in Virginia

The Virginia cities with the most repair services. Most do walk-in service, drop-off, and house calls depending on the brand and the issue.

Richmond
6 services
Williamsburg
3 services
Fredericksburg
2 services
Roanoke
2 services
Hampton
2 services
Fairfax
2 services
Falls Church
2 services
Chesapeake
1 service
Portsmouth
1 service
Manassas
1 service
Newport News
1 service
North Chesterfield
1 service

Combine a repair drop-off with a Virginia trip

If you're driving across Virginia to drop off your machine for service anyway, the Trip Planner can map quilt shops along the same route. Useful for tune-up runs that take a few hours of shop time.

Plan a Virginia trip →

Common questions about sewing machine repair in Virginia

How many sewing machine repair shops are in Virginia?

QuiltMap lists 36 sewing machine repair shops in Virginia across 24 cities. This includes brand-authorized service centers (Bernina, Husqvarna Viking, Janome, Brother dealers) as well as independent shops that work on multiple brands.

How often should I get my sewing machine serviced?

Most manufacturers recommend an annual tune-up for machines in regular use, or every 2–3 years for occasional use. Heavy quilting use (longarm, daily piecing) usually warrants twice-yearly service. A basic tune-up runs $80–$150 in 2026; deeper repairs are quoted after diagnostic.

Can Virginia repair shops service vintage machines?

Many can. Independent shops are often better than brand-authorized centers for vintage Singer, Featherweight, and pre-electronic machines. Check the listing description or call ahead to confirm — some shops specialize, others stick to modern machines only.

Are house calls available in Virginia?

For longarm machines and large industrial sewing machines, yes — many techs prefer to service in-place rather than transport. Domestic machines are usually drop-off. Each shop's listing notes their preferences.

My favorite Virginia repair shop isn't listed. How do I add it?

Use the Submit a Listing form to add a missing shop. Submissions are reviewed and then appear in the directory. Independent techs welcome.

Don't see your local sewing-machine repair shop?

Help your fellow quilters by adding it to QuiltMap.

Add a listing