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Fisher & Paykel Appliance Error Codes
Lookup & Diagnostics

Find your error code, understand what it means, and learn whether you need professional service. Covers every Fisher & Paykel appliance category — cooktops, dishwashers, dryers, freezers, ovens, ranges, refrigerators, washers, and wine refrigerations.

133 Error codes
9 Appliance types
93 Service areas
105 Models covered

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—- (Four Dashes)
Four dashes "----" on an older Fisher & Paykel OB60 oven mean it overheated — open the door to cool, then reset.
Oven
A09
A09 on a newest-gen Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer (DD*C) means the sanitize cycle did not reach the required temperature.
Dishwasher
A1
A1 on a newest-gen Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer is a water-supply problem — low or no incoming water.
Dishwasher
A3
A3 on a newest-gen Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer means the tub cannot drain — a motor or drain-hose blockage.
Dishwasher
A6
A6 on a newest-gen Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer means no spray arm or inadequate water pressure/flow.
Dishwasher
A60
A60 is a full-size Fisher & Paykel DW dishwasher water-temperature/heating fault — NOT a DishDrawer code.
Dishwasher
A7
A7 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer is an excess-foam auto-recovery code — the drawer runs a recovery program.
Dishwasher
ADR
"ADR" on a Fisher & Paykel washer is an auto-drain safety message, not a fault — the machine drains to a safe level after being paused.
Washer
Airflow Restricted
Restricted airflow on a Fisher & Paykel dryer — an observable condition that can trigger code 16.
Dryer
Blank Display
A oven display that is blank or unresponsive — an observable condition.
Oven
Code 1
Code 1 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is a communication error between the sensor module and motor control module.
Dryer
Code 10
Code 10 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is a 24 V supply measurement error — low actuator supply voltage.
Dryer
Code 11
Code 11 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is a lid-lock open-circuit fault (harness or coil continuity).
Dryer
Code 12
Code 12 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is a lid-lock switching-device failure (short in the lock circuit).
Dryer
Code 14
Code 14 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is a sensor-module fault — replace the sensor module.
Dryer
Code 15
Code 15 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is a sensor-module fault — replace the sensor module.
Dryer
Code 16
Code 16 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is an airflow restriction — a clogged lint filter or blocked exhaust duct (owner-fixable).
Dryer
Code 2
Code 2 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer means the drum gap cannot be located.
Dryer
Code 20
Code 20 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer means the door actuator has stalled.
Dryer
Code 21
Code 21 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer means the door actuator required excess voltage (a mechanical obstruction).
Dryer
Code 22
Code 22 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is a door-actuator open-circuit fault (unplugged or broken wiring).
Dryer
Code 3
Code 3 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer indicates the drum has stalled.
Dryer
Code 6
Code 6 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is a door-jammed warning — an owner-fixable condition.
Dryer
Code 8
Code 8 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is an exhaust-sensor over-temperature fault.
Dryer
Code 9
Code 9 on a Fisher & Paykel dryer is an exhaust-sensor under-temperature fault.
Dryer
Controls Locked
A cooktop with locked controls — usually the child-lock feature, an observable state.
Cooktop
Cooktop E2 / EH
E2 or EH on a Fisher & Paykel induction range cooktop is a zone overheat — the zone shuts off as a safety measure.
Range
Cooktop Er Code
An Er code on a Fisher & Paykel induction range cooktop is a generic internal cooktop fault — separate from the oven F-codes.
Range
Door Alarm Beeping
A fridge door alarm that keeps beeping — an observable indicator condition.
Refrigerator
Door Alarm Won’t Stop
A wine cabinet door alarm that will not stop — an observable indicator condition.
Wine Refrigeration
Door Locked After Self-Clean
A oven door that stays locked after self-clean — often a cool-down interlock (may show F7).
Oven
Door Won’t Open
A front-load washer door that will not open — often the Err 235 door-lock condition.
Washer
Drawer Won’t Seal
A DishDrawer drawer that will not seal or close — an observable condition (may show F5/U2).
Dishwasher
E1
E1 on a classic flashing-light Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer means the door/drawer is not fully closed.
Dishwasher
E2 / EH
E2 or EH on a Fisher & Paykel induction cooktop is a cooking-zone overheat — the zone shuts off as a safety measure.
Cooktop
E3
E3 on a classic Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer is a drain or low-water-level fault (drain hose too low), not a temperature code.
Dishwasher
E4
E4 on a classic Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer means the drain hose is too high/kinked or the drawer is not draining.
Dishwasher
E5
E5 on a classic Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer means the supply hose is crimped, the tap is off, or pressure is low.
Dishwasher
E5 / E7 / E9
E5, E7, or E9 on a Fisher & Paykel induction cooktop is a generic internal error — try a mains reset, then call service.
Cooktop
E6
E6 on a classic Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer means the flood switch has activated — water in the base.
Dishwasher
E6
E6 on a Fisher & Paykel induction cooktop means it is incorrectly connected to the power supply — an electrician fault.
Cooktop
E7:01
E7:01 on a Fisher & Paykel WH front-load washer is a motor stall — sometimes a jammed drum the owner can clear.
Washer
E7:03
E7:03 on a Fisher & Paykel WH front-load washer is a motor over-current fault in the E7:xx family.
Washer
Er20 / Er31 / Er47
Er20, Er31, or Er47 on a Fisher & Paykel induction cooktop is a generic internal cooktop fault — note the code and reset at the mains.
Cooktop
Err 235
Err 235 on a Fisher & Paykel WH front-load washer is a "Door Locked" condition — the door is held during the cycle.
Washer
Excess Foam
Excess foam in a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer — an observable condition that triggers A7 auto-recovery.
Dishwasher
F Code Reset
How to respond to a flashing F-code on a Fisher & Paykel oven — an observable condition and reset guidance.
Oven
F1
F1 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer (models ending in 9) is a flood switch activated — water in the chassis base.
Dishwasher
F1
F1 on a Fisher & Paykel oven means the electronics bay exceeded its safe temperature — usually a cooling-fan or ventilation blockage.
Oven
F2
F2 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer (ending-9) is a motor problem — the rotor stalled or overloaded.
Dishwasher
F2
F2 on a Fisher & Paykel oven is a cavity over-temperature during a pyrolytic self-clean cycle.
Oven
F3
F3 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer (ending-9) is a temperature-sensor fault, or incoming water above 65 °C / 150 °F.
Dishwasher
F3
F3 on a Fisher & Paykel oven is a cavity over-temperature during normal cooking.
Oven
F30
F30 on a Fisher & Paykel ActiveSmart fridge is a display "no signal" fault — a shorted or broken wire to the display module.
Refrigerator
F31
F31 on a Fisher & Paykel ActiveSmart fridge is a display "no signal" fault, closely related to F30.
Refrigerator
F4
F4 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer (ending-9) is a faulty temperature sensor and/or heating element.
Dishwasher
F4
F4 on a Fisher & Paykel oven is a power-module (control board) fault.
Oven
F40
F40 is a full-size Fisher & Paykel DW dishwasher water-flow error — NOT a DishDrawer code (older DW60 used E40).
Dishwasher
F5
F5 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer (ending-9) is a lid fault — the drawer lid did not seal or move as expected.
Dishwasher
F5
F5 on a Fisher & Paykel oven is a communications error between the clock module and the power module.
Oven
F7
F7 on a Fisher & Paykel oven is a door-lock fault — the lock is jammed or the lock switch or sensor faults.
Oven
F8
F8 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer (ending-9) is an electrical problem detected by the control.
Dishwasher
F9
F9 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer (ending-9) is an electronics malfunction in the control.
Dishwasher
Fan Noise
A fridge making fan noise — an observable condition (may relate to Code 17).
Refrigerator
Fan Noise
A freezer making fan noise — an observable condition (may relate to Code 17).
Freezer
Fault Code 10
Fault 10 on a Fisher & Paykel top-load washer is a temperature-sensor (thermistor) error.
Washer
Fault Code 160
Fault 160 on a Fisher & Paykel top-load washer is a bowl-status fault — the bowl re-engaged during agitate.
Washer
Fault Code 17
Fault Code 17 on a Fisher & Paykel ActiveSmart fridge is a freezer-compartment fan drawing low current — open-circuit wiring or a faulty fan.
Refrigerator
Fault Code 2
Fault Code 2 on a Fisher & Paykel ActiveSmart fridge means the previous two defrost cycles were aborted — usually the defrost element.
Refrigerator
Fault Code 20
Fault Code 20 on a Fisher & Paykel ActiveSmart ice & water fridge is a flapper-heater low-current fault — check the connections and heater.
Refrigerator
Fault Code 21
Fault 21 differs by platform: a SmartDrive out-of-sequence family, or an AquaSmart water-inlet-valve fault.
Washer
Fault Code 237
Fault 237 on a Fisher & Paykel top-load washer is a temperature-sensor error tied to harness or connection continuity.
Washer
Fault Code 36
Fault 36 on a Fisher & Paykel SmartDrive top-load washer is a water-leak fault — the module topped up water more than four times.
Washer
Fault Code 37
Fault 37 on a Fisher & Paykel top-load washer means the pump is blocked or not draining — the water level did not change.
Washer
Fault Code 38
Fault 38 on a Fisher & Paykel top-load washer is a pressure-sensor fault — the level reads empty during agitate.
Washer
Fault Code 39
Fault 39 on a Fisher & Paykel top-load washer is a pressure-tube fault — the tube is blocked, kinked, or fallen off.
Washer
Fault Code 40
Fault 40 on a Fisher & Paykel top-load washer is a bowl dis-engage (clutch) fault — the bowl did not disengage as expected.
Washer
Fault Code 50
Fault 50 differs by platform: a SmartDrive hot-valve fault, or an AquaSmart inlet-valve fault.
Washer
Fault Code 56
Fault 56 differs by platform: a SmartDrive bowl-check fault, or an AquaSmart clutch fault.
Washer
Fault Code 68
Fault 68 on a Fisher & Paykel top-load washer is a pressure-transducer error — the count read too high.
Washer
Freezer Fault Code 17
Fault Code 17 on a Fisher & Paykel ActiveSmart freezer is a freezer-compartment fan drawing low current — open wiring or a faulty fan.
Freezer
Freezer Spanner Symbol
A spanner symbol on a Fisher & Paykel ActiveSmart freezer signals a stored fault code — record the number and reset.
Freezer
Frost Buildup
Frost or ice buildup in a Fisher & Paykel fridge or freezer — an observable defrost-related condition (may relate to Code 2).
Refrigerator
Frost Buildup
Frost or ice buildup in a Fisher & Paykel freezer — an observable defrost-related condition.
Freezer
Gas Burner Won’t Light
A gas cooktop burner that will not light — a symptom-only condition (gas has no fault codes).
Cooktop
Gas Burner Won’t Light
A range gas burner that will not light — a symptom-only condition (gas burners have no fault codes).
Range
Gas Flame Goes Out
A gas cooktop flame that goes out when the knob is released — a symptom-only safety condition.
Cooktop
Halo Dials Not Lighting
A range with halo dials that do not light — an observable indicator condition.
Range
High Temp Alarm
A freezer high-temperature or door alarm — an observable indicator condition.
Freezer
How To Reset
How to reset a Fisher & Paykel ActiveSmart fridge — an observable procedure for clearing a transient fault.
Refrigerator
Ice Maker Not Working
A fridge ice maker that is not making ice — an observable condition.
Refrigerator
Leaking
A washer leaking water — an observable condition (top-load may show Fault 36).
Washer
Long Dry Times
A dryer taking far too long to dry — an observable condition.
Dryer
No Heat
A dryer that runs but produces no heat — an observable condition.
Dryer
No tap
A washer showing "No tap" is not getting water — it did not reach the required level within 8 minutes.
Washer
Noisy Or Vibrating
A wine cabinet that is noisy or vibrating — an observable symptom-only condition.
Wine Refrigeration
Not Cleaning / Film
A DishDrawer not cleaning well or leaving film — an observable condition (may show U6/A6).
Dishwasher
Not Cooling
A fridge that is not cooling — an observable condition with several causes.
Refrigerator
Not Cooling
A wine cabinet that is not holding temperature — an observable symptom-only condition.
Wine Refrigeration
Not Drying
A DishDrawer not drying dishes — an observable condition.
Dishwasher
Not Drying
A dryer that runs but leaves clothes damp — an observable condition.
Dryer
Not Freezing
A freezer that is not freezing — an observable condition with several causes.
Freezer
On-Panel Fault Code Showing
A wine cabinet showing an on-panel fault code — record it and contact service (no published meaning).
Wine Refrigeration
Out Of Bal
A washer showing "Out Of Bal" — an observable unbalanced-load warning.
Washer
Oven F3
F3 on a Fisher & Paykel range oven cavity is a cavity over-temperature during cooking, as on wall ovens.
Range
Oven F5
F5 on a Fisher & Paykel range oven cavity is a clock-to-power-module communications error, the same as on wall ovens.
Range
Oven Won’t Heat
A range oven that will not heat — an observable condition.
Range
Pan Not Detected
A induction cooktop that will not detect a pan — an observable condition.
Cooktop
Panel Unresponsive
A wine cabinet control panel that is unresponsive — an observable symptom-only condition.
Wine Refrigeration
Running Constantly
A freezer that runs constantly — an observable condition with several causes.
Freezer
Self-Clean Won’t Start
A oven self-clean (pyrolytic) that will not start — an observable condition.
Oven
Spanner Showing
A freezer showing a spanner — an observable indicator to record the code and reset.
Freezer
Spanner Symbol Showing
A fridge showing a spanner symbol — an observable indicator that a fault code is present.
Refrigerator
Suds Loc
A washer showing "Suds Loc" — too many suds detected.
Washer
Temperature Off
A oven running hotter or cooler than set — an observable condition.
Oven
Too Cold
A wine cabinet running too cold — an observable symptom-only condition.
Wine Refrigeration
U1
U1 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer is a water-fill error — check the supply and spray arm.
Dishwasher
U2
U2 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer is a loading error — dishes are too tall for the lid to close.
Dishwasher
U4
U4 on a Fisher & Paykel double DishDrawer means a fault in the OTHER drawer is preventing this one from running.
Dishwasher
U6
U6 on a Fisher & Paykel DishDrawer is a spray-arm fault — the arm is loose or detached.
Dishwasher
Water Dispenser Dead
A fridge water dispenser that will not dispense — an observable condition.
Refrigerator
Water In Base / Flood
A DishDrawer flood / water in base — an observable leak condition (shows F1/E6).
Dishwasher
Won’t Drain
A washer that will not drain — an observable condition (top-load may show Fault 37).
Washer
Won’t Drain
A DishDrawer that will not drain — an observable condition (may show F2/A3).
Dishwasher
Won’t Fill
A washer that will not fill — an observable water-supply condition (often shows "No tap").
Washer
Won’t Fill
A DishDrawer that will not fill — an observable condition (may show U1/A1).
Dishwasher
Won’t Heat
A oven that will not heat or stays cool — an observable condition.
Oven
Won’t Latch
A dryer door that will not latch — an observable condition (may show code 6/11/22).
Dryer
Won’t Power On
A cooktop that will not power on — an observable condition (induction E6 if miswired).
Cooktop
Won’t Spin
A washer that will not spin — an observable condition, often drainage or balance.
Washer
Won’t Start
A washer that will not start — an observable condition with several causes.
Washer
Won’t Start
A dryer that will not start — an observable condition with several causes.
Dryer
Zone Shuts Off Mid-Cook
A induction zone that shuts off during cooking — an observable condition (may show E2/EH).
Cooktop
About Fisher & Paykel error codes

What error codes mean on Fisher & Paykel appliances

Every modern Fisher & Paykel appliance has an onboard diagnostic system that displays alphanumeric fault codes when something goes wrong. These aren’t random — each code maps to a specific component, sensor, or system failure. Understanding what your code means helps you decide whether the fix is a quick reset or requires a certified technician.

Error code formats vary by appliance category. Dishwashers use A-codes (A1, A3, A6) and E-codes (E4–E6) alongside plain-language fault messages. Refrigerators and laundry appliances use numbered fault codes and F-codes (F30, F31). Ranges and ovens use F-codes such as F1–F7 that reference specific circuits.

How Fisher & Paykel diagnostic systems work

Fisher & Paykel uses a layered diagnostic architecture across its appliance lineup. At the core is a main control board (PCB) that monitors inputs from sensors — NTC temperature probes, flow meters, tachometers, pressure switches, and door interlocks. When a sensor reading falls outside its expected range, or a component fails to respond within a set timeout, the control board logs a fault and triggers the error display.

Some appliances store fault history even after a power reset. On Fisher & Paykel dishwashers, you can access a hidden diagnostic mode by pressing a specific button combination (varies by series — our individual model pages list the exact steps). Fisher & Paykel washers and dryers store the last several fault codes in memory, which our technicians read with Fisher & Paykel-specific diagnostic tools during a service visit.

How to read your error code

  1. Locate the display — most codes appear on the main control panel or LED readout. Some dishwashers flash the code through indicator lights instead of a digital display.
  2. Note the exact code — write down exactly what appears, including leading zeros. E01 and E1 may reference different faults depending on the appliance.
  3. Check the appliance type — the same code can mean different things on a dishwasher vs. a dryer. Use the filter tabs above to narrow down your category.
  4. Try a power reset first — unplug the appliance for 60 seconds, then restore power. If the code reappears, the issue requires diagnosis.
  5. Check for simple causes — before calling for service, verify the basics: water supply is on, drain hose isn’t kinked, filters are clean, the door is latching properly. Our individual code pages list specific self-checks for each error.

Most common error codes across all Fisher & Paykel appliances

Certain fault patterns appear far more often than others. Based on our service data across thousands of Fisher & Paykel repairs:

  • Dishwasher drain fault — drain blockage. The single most common Fisher & Paykel error code we see. In about 30% of cases, cleaning the drain filter resolves it without a service call. See our drain troubleshooting guide.
  • Dishwasher flood (water in base) — water in the base pan tripped the flood protection flood sensor. Sometimes caused by a minor splash during loading rather than a real leak. Check the base tray and door seal before resetting.
  • Washer drain fault — drain timeout. Often caused by a clogged coin trap or kinked drain hose rather than a pump failure.
  • Dryer no-heat fault — heating system fault. On conventional dryers, usually a failed heating element. On heat pump models, may indicate a refrigerant issue requiring sealed-system service.
  • Oven temperature fault — temperature sensor failure. The NTC probe inside the oven cavity has drifted or failed. An inexpensive repair when caught early.

When to call for service

Some codes indicate minor issues you can resolve yourself — a clogged filter, a tripped breaker, a door that wasn’t fully closed. Our individual code pages walk through these self-check steps first.

But codes related to sealed systems (compressors, refrigerant), electrical components (heating elements, control boards), gas valves, or persistent leak detection should always be handled by a certified technician. Operating an appliance with an active fault code can cause secondary damage that turns a routine repair into an expensive one.

Warning signs that require immediate attention:

  • Burning smell or visible sparking — disconnect power immediately and call for service
  • Gas smell near a range or oven — leave the area, ventilate, and contact your gas company before scheduling appliance repair
  • Water actively leaking — shut off the water supply valve behind or below the appliance
  • Code reappears after every power reset — the fault is persistent and won’t resolve without parts replacement
  • Multiple codes displaying simultaneously — may indicate a control board failure rather than individual component issues

Error codes vs. warning indicators

Not every display message is an error code. Fisher & Paykel appliances also show status indicators and reminders that don’t represent faults:

  • Rinse aid indicator (dishwasher) — the rinse aid reservoir is low. Refill it; no repair needed.
  • Filter reminder (dryer) — clean the lint filter. This is a maintenance prompt, not a fault code.
  • Water filter indicator (refrigerator) — the water filter is due for replacement based on a timer, not actual filter condition.
  • Demo/exhibition mode — the appliance appears to run but doesn’t heat or use water. Usually activated accidentally during installation. Check your model’s manual for the deactivation sequence.

Repair costs by error type

Error codes vary dramatically in repair cost. Sensor replacements (NTC probes, thermistors, flow meters) are typically the least expensive — parts start from $15 and labor is minimal. Mechanical components like pumps, motors, and door assemblies fall in the mid-range. Control board replacements and sealed-system work (compressors, refrigerant) are the most expensive repairs.

Our detailed cost guides break down pricing by appliance type: dishwasher repair costs, refrigerator repair costs, washer repair costs, dryer repair costs, and oven & range repair costs. Every code page on this site also includes a typical repair cost range so you know what to expect before booking.

Error codes by appliance type

Each appliance category has its own set of fault codes. Use these links to jump directly to the codes for your appliance:

Preventing error codes with maintenance

Many of the most common error codes are preventable with routine maintenance. A few minutes of care each month can avoid expensive service calls:

  • Dishwashersclean the drain filter monthly and run a cleaning cycle every 2-3 months. This prevents drain faults.
  • Dryersclean the vent duct annually and the lint filter after every load. Restricted airflow triggers heating faults.
  • Washersclean the coin trap/drain filter every 3 months. Foreign objects in the pump cause drain faults and can damage the impeller.
  • Refrigeratorsclean condenser coils every 6-12 months. Dust buildup causes the compressor to overwork, eventually triggering temperature fault codes.
  • Ovens — avoid running self-clean more than twice a year. The extreme heat (900°F+) is the leading cause of thermal fuse and control board failures.

Coverage and models

Our technicians carry diagnostic tools calibrated for every Fisher & Paykel appliance series — 100, 300, 500, 800, and Series 11. We service all Fisher & Paykel models across all 50 US states. Whether your unit is current or legacy, we have the parts and expertise to get it running. Schedule your repair — same-day booking available 24/7.

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