When your Hisense dishwasher shows an error code, it’s usually not a “mystery fault” — it’s a clear warning that the unit has detected a blockage or an unsafe condition and has stopped (or limited) the cycle to protect itself. That code acts like a first-pass diagnosis: it points you to the most logical area to check first. On dishwashers, the most common causes are related to water filling (low pressure, closed tap, clogged inlet filter), draining (dirty filters, kinked drain hose, a struggling pump), heating (heater, NTC sensor, or temperature control), level and leak detection (float switch, water in the base tray, pressure switch), or electronic faults (connections, control board, or power supply). The goal of this guide is simple: help you identify the type of problem and the first sensible check before you take anything apart or call a technician.
Below you’ll find a quick-reference table with the most common Hisense dishwasher error codes, explained in a practical way. Look up the code exactly as it appears on the display, read the summary, and use it to choose your next step: whether it’s a typical issue you can solve with quick actions (cleaning filters, checking hoses, making sure the tap is open, restarting the unit) or something that points to a deeper inspection (pump, temperature/level sensor, internal leak, electronic module), where following a guided troubleshooting flow helps you avoid replacing parts by trial and error.