Kenmore Dishwasher F9E1 Error — What It Means
F9E1 signals a drain timeout fault. The control board expects the water level to drop during the drain cycle, but the machine isn’t draining or is draining too slowly. Because Kenmore dishwashers are built on Whirlpool platforms, this code follows the Whirlpool F9E1 definition: “can’t drain cycle.” The dishwasher has detected a drain system problem and stopped the cycle to prevent flooding or further issues.
This is a drain-path fault, not a wash or heating problem. The machine is telling you that water is sitting in the tub longer than the control allows. In most cases the blockage is external to the dishwasher itself, in the hose, disposer connection, or sink plumbing.
Common Causes
- Knockout plug left in garbage disposer When the dishwasher drain connects to a new disposer, the small knockout plug inside the disposer inlet must be removed or the drain path is completely blocked.
- Kinked or clogged drain hose The hose can develop kinks during installation, accumulate food debris inside, or be routed incorrectly so water cannot flow freely to the sink or disposer.
- Food blockage in drain path Debris can lodge in the disposer inlet, air gap (if equipped), or the sink branch tailpiece and stop or slow the flow enough to trigger the timeout.
- Failed or obstructed drain pump If the external drain path is clear but the dishwasher still won’t empty, the pump itself may be jammed, have a broken impeller, or have failed electrically.
- Excessive suds from wrong detergent Using non-dishwasher detergent or too much detergent can create foam that interferes with drainage and triggers the fault on Whirlpool-family machines.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Disconnect power for about 30 seconds, then restore it and run a short drain cycle to see if the fault was a one-time glitch.
- Inspect the garbage disposer connection if your dishwasher drains into a disposer: shine a flashlight into the disposer inlet from the dishwasher hose side and confirm the knockout plug was removed when the hose was installed.
- Check the drain hose routing from the dishwasher to the sink or disposer: look for kinks, pinch points, or sags that trap water, and confirm the hose rises to an air-gap height or is looped up under the countertop before dropping to the drain.
- Remove and inspect the drain hose if routing looks correct: disconnect it at both ends and flush it with a garden hose or under a faucet to clear any food buildup or clogs inside.
- Clear the disposer and sink drain by running the disposer with hot water for 15 seconds, then check the air gap (the small chrome cap on the sink deck) for blockage if your installation has one.
- Test the drain pump if all external paths are clear: run the dishwasher in a drain or diagnostic cycle, listen for the pump motor, and look for water movement in the hose; if the pump runs but no water moves, the pump impeller is likely blocked or broken.
- Replace the drain pump if it does not run when commanded or runs but does not move water: access the pump from underneath the dishwasher tub, disconnect the wiring and hose clamps, and swap in a new pump assembly matching your Kenmore model number.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Dishwasher drain pump | Amazon | Required when the pump motor is weak, noisy, or does not move water even when the drain path is clear. Match your Kenmore model number. |
| Dishwasher drain hose | Amazon | Needed if the existing hose is kinked, cracked, or so clogged that flushing does not clear it. Typical size is 3/4-inch inner diameter. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a technician if you have checked and cleared the disposer knockout, hose, and external drain path but the F9E1 code returns every cycle. Also call if you tested the drain pump and found it receives power (around 120 V at the pump terminals during a drain cycle) but still does not run, or if you are not comfortable working under the dishwasher to remove the kick plate and access the pump. A pro can run the service diagnostic mode to confirm pump command from the control board and isolate wiring or control faults that a visual inspection will miss.