Maytag Range F1 Error Code — What It Means
The F1 error on a Maytag range signals a control-system fault. Maytag links this code to a problem with the oven temperature sensor, the electronic control board, or the wiring that connects them. On some model families you may see F1-1 (same meaning as plain F1) or F1-A, which instead points to the oven door latch or door lock switch circuit rather than the sensor. The code appears when the control detects an open circuit, short, or out-of-range signal on one of these monitored lines.
Common Causes
- Failed oven temperature sensor The sensor probe or its internal thermistor can drift out of range, short, or open due to heat stress or age.
- Loose or corroded wiring connector The plug between the sensor harness and the control board can work loose, corrode, or suffer heat damage over time.
- Damaged sensor harness Wires routed near the oven cavity can chafe, crack from heat cycling, or short against metal cabinet edges.
- Defective electronic control board The main control can develop logic faults or component-level failures that trigger a false F1 even when the sensor circuit is good.
- Door latch or lock switch fault (F1-A models) On ranges that display F1-A, the oven door latch assembly or lock microswitch circuit is open or shorted instead of the temperature sensor.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Turn off the circuit breaker that feeds the range and leave it off for one full minute, then restore power and watch the display to see if the F1 returns.
- Identify your code variant by checking the exact display: plain F1 or F1-1 means sensor circuit, F1-A means door latch circuit.
- Unplug the range and pull it forward so you can access the rear panel and lower access cover.
- Inspect all connectors on the oven temperature sensor harness (or door lock harness for F1-A) for loose pins, corrosion, or heat discoloration, then reseat each plug firmly.
- Test the oven temperature sensor resistance at room temperature and compare the reading to the service range listed in your model’s tech sheet before ordering a replacement sensor.
- Replace the oven temperature sensor if the resistance is out of spec or the wiring and connectors are good but the fault persists.
- Replace the electronic control board only after verifying that the sensor, door switch (if F1-A), and all wiring test within normal limits and the code still reappears.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Maytag oven temperature sensor | Amazon | Match the probe length and connector style to your model’s original sensor. |
| Maytag range electronic control board | Amazon | Model-specific board, verify your full model and serial number before ordering. |
| Maytag oven door latch assembly | Amazon | For F1-A codes only, includes the lock motor and microswitch in most kits. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a technician if you are uncomfortable working inside a 240-volt appliance, if the fault returns immediately after a power reset and you cannot isolate whether the sensor or control is at fault, or if you have replaced the sensor and cleaned every connector but the F1 persists. Door latch and control board replacements on self-cleaning ranges often require precise alignment and live voltage checks that are safer in professional hands.