GE Microwave PF Error Code — What It Means
The PF code on a GE microwave stands for power failure. It means the control board detected a loss or interruption of incoming electrical power. This can happen during a utility outage, when the unit is unplugged, when a breaker trips, or when the supply voltage drops below the level the control expects. The microwave flags the condition and waits for you to acknowledge and reset it.
PF is not a magnetron or cooking fault. It is purely a power-supply event log. Once you restore stable power and clear the code, the microwave should resume normal operation. If the code returns immediately after reset with confirmed good power at the outlet, the control board itself may be failing or seeing phantom voltage drops.
Common Causes
- House power outage or brief utility interruption The most common reason is that your home lost power momentarily or the microwave was without electricity during a storm or grid event.
- Microwave unplugged or loose cord connection Pulling the plug to move the appliance, or a cord that has worked partway out of the receptacle, will trigger the code when power is restored.
- Tripped circuit breaker or blown fuse A breaker that opened on the microwave circuit, or a blown household fuse, cuts power and the control logs PF when the circuit is re-energized.
- Loose or failing wall outlet A receptacle with worn contacts or heat damage can create intermittent power loss that the microwave control reads as a failure event.
- Unstable incoming voltage If supply voltage sags below roughly 100 to 120 volts, the control may interpret it as a power interruption and display PF.
- Faulty control board or internal fuse When the external supply is confirmed good and the code persists after reset, the main control board or an internal fuse behind the panel may be defective.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Check for an external power event by asking whether there was a utility outage, unplugging, or breaker trip in the home before the code appeared.
- Press CLEAR or OFF on the touchpad to acknowledge and dismiss the PF message if the microwave allows it.
- Unplug the microwave from the wall outlet, wait 60 seconds to two minutes, then plug it back in to perform a hard reset and clear the control memory.
- Test the wall receptacle by plugging in a lamp or other appliance to confirm the outlet is live, and check your breaker panel for any tripped breakers or blown fuses on that circuit.
- Inspect the microwave power cord and outlet connection for a loose plug, heat marks, or a worn receptacle, and replace the outlet if it is loose or damaged.
- If the PF code returns immediately after the reset and the outlet tests good, unplug the unit and remove the control panel cover per your model’s service procedure to inspect the internal fuse above or behind the panel for an open or blown condition, replacing it only with the correct rated part.
- Replace the main control board or electronic control assembly if the fuse is intact and the code persists, then verify that the microwave powers on normally and does not display PF again.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| GE microwave control board / main control board | Amazon | Required when PF recurs after confirmed good supply power and reset. Match your exact model number. |
| Microwave internal fuse | Amazon | Located behind the control panel on many GE models. Replace only with the OEM-rated fuse for your unit. |
| Microwave power cord | Amazon | Needed if continuity testing shows an open conductor or if the cord jacket is damaged. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a qualified appliance technician if you are uncomfortable working inside the microwave cabinet, if you lack a multimeter to test the outlet and fuse, or if the PF code returns after you have confirmed stable incoming power and completed a hard reset. High-voltage capacitors and other internal components can retain a dangerous charge even when unplugged, so any work beyond resetting the breaker and testing the receptacle should be left to a trained service professional.