E3
KitchenAid Dishwasher
Severity: ModerateWhat it means
KitchenAid dishwasher E3 is one of the codes KitchenAid's support site treats as a generic control-side fault — they don't publish a specific component as the cause.
The only fix KitchenAid lists is a 30-second power disconnect to reset the dishwasher's electronic control.
If the code returns immediately after the reset, schedule service.
Affected Models
- KitchenAid KDPM, KDTM, KDTE, KDFE built-in dishwashers
- KitchenAid KDPE, KDPE804K, KDPE234G series
- KitchenAid PrintShield, Architect II, and panel-ready models
- KitchenAid KUDS legacy series (older models)
- Same codes appear on Whirlpool, Maytag, and JennAir dishwashers (shared platform)
Common Causes
- Intermittent control board fault
- Brief power-supply glitch confusing the control
- Sensor reading the control rejected as out-of-range
- Stuck routine after a paused cycle or interrupted power
- Control board failure (if the reset doesn't clear it)
How to Fix It
-
Disconnect power for 30 seconds.
Plug-in models: pull the plug at the outlet under the sink for a full 30 seconds, then plug back in.
Hardwired models: switch the dedicated breaker off at the electrical panel for 30 seconds, then back on.
This is the only step KitchenAid publishes for E3. -
Confirm the code is gone.
After power restores, the panel should light normally with no E3 displayed.
Start a short cycle (Rinse Only or Quick) to verify the fault doesn't return immediately. -
Schedule service if E3 returns.
If E3 reappears straight after the reset or on the very next cycle, the control board may be failing.
This is a service call — replacement boards are model-specific and the diagnostic needs the technician's reader.
When to Call a Professional
If a 30-second power reset doesn't clear E3 — or if it clears and the code returns on the next cycle — schedule service.
The fault is on the control side and isn't owner-serviceable beyond the power cycle.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why won't KitchenAid say what E3 actually means?
KitchenAid's consumer-facing support pages publish a fix step but not the technical cause for several of their dishwasher codes (E3, E6, E7, F2E2, F3E2 among them).
Service technicians get a separate tech sheet inside the door panel with the full meaning — but it's not in the customer manual.
For E3 specifically, a power reset clears the majority of cases, which is why it's the only published step.