KitchenAid Dishwasher Won’t Fill With Water — What’s Happening
A KitchenAid dishwasher that won’t fill with water is not displaying an error code but simply fails to bring water into the tub during the fill portion of the cycle. KitchenAid groups this symptom under several interlock and plumbing conditions that prevent the unit from opening or receiving water.
The fault means something is blocking the fill process before water enters the machine. This can be as simple as a closed supply valve or as involved as a defective water inlet valve or control board output failure.
Most Likely Causes
- Water supply valve closed or kinked line KitchenAid identifies a closed shutoff valve under the sink or a kinked supply line as the first check when the dishwasher fails to fill.
- Door not fully closed or latched KitchenAid notes a flashing START/RESUME light usually signals an open or unlatched door, which will prevent the fill cycle from starting.
- Drain hose installed too low causing siphoning KitchenAid says the drain hose loop must be at least 20 inches above the floor or subfloor or the machine can siphon water out as fast as it enters.
- Overfill protection float stuck or obstructed KitchenAid lists a stuck overfill float as a common cause that trips the safety interlock and blocks the fill valve from opening.
- Defective water inlet valve or clogged inlet screen KitchenAid identifies the water inlet valve as the component controlling water flow, and a failed valve or blocked screen will stop all fill.
- Float switch failure The float switch in the fill-interlock chain can fail open and prevent the control from sending power to the inlet valve.
- Control board not sending power to valve If the valve and all interlocks test good but the valve never receives voltage during fill, the control board output has likely failed.
How to Diagnose and Fix
- Verify the water shutoff valve under the sink is fully open and the supply line is not kinked or restricted.
- Confirm the door latches firmly and listen for the click, and check that the START/RESUME light is not flashing to indicate an unlatched door.
- Inspect the drain hose routing and confirm the high loop is installed at least 20 inches above the floor or subfloor to prevent siphoning, and correct the installation if needed.
- Access the overfill protection float inside the tub, move it up and down by hand, and clear any debris or obstruction so it moves freely.
- Locate the water inlet valve behind the lower access panel, inspect the inlet screens for debris or clogs, and clean or replace the screens if blocked.
- Test the water inlet valve coil for continuity with a multimeter, and replace the valve if it shows physical damage, cracks, or fails the continuity test.
- Test the float switch for continuity by checking resistance on the Rx1 scale and watching for an open/closed change as you move the float mechanism up and down.
- If the valve, float switch, and door switch all pass testing, verify the control board is sending power to the valve during the fill cycle, and trace wiring or replace the control board if voltage is absent.
Parts You Might Need
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Water inlet valve | Amazon | Controls water flow into the dishwasher and can fail electrically or become clogged. |
| Overfill protection float assembly | Amazon | Safety interlock that stops fill if water level is too high or float is stuck. |
| Float switch | Amazon | Signals the control board when float is up or down and can fail open. |
Related Error Codes
If your appliance also shows a code on the display, these match this problem:
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F1E1 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F1E2 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F2E2 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F3E1 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F3E2 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F4E3 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F5E1 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F6E1 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F6E2 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F6E3 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F6E4 error code
- Kitchenaid Dishwasher F7E1 error code
When to Call a Pro
If you have verified the water supply is on, the door latches properly, the drain hose is routed correctly, and the float moves freely but the dishwasher still won’t fill, the repair moves to testing live voltage at the inlet valve and tracing interlock switches. A technician has the meters and experience to isolate whether the valve itself has failed, a safety switch is open, or the control board is not sending the fill command.