A dishwasher not starting is almost always one of these seven things:

  1. Child lock is activated
  2. Door not fully latched
  3. Delayed start mode accidentally set
  4. Blown thermal fuse
  5. Faulty door latch switch
  6. Failed control board
  7. Tripped breaker or GFCI outlet

Start with the top three — they’re free fixes that take under two minutes. If those don’t work, you’re likely looking at a parts failure, which means a multimeter and a little more time.

Why won't my dishwasher start? 7 common reasons

Perfect Appliance Repair Tampa

What's causing your dishwasher not turning on?

1. Child lock is on

Most dishwashers have a child lock that disables all buttons. It’s easy to trip it by accident. Check your model’s manual — on most Bosch, GE, and Whirlpool units, you press and hold a specific button for 3 seconds to toggle it. Look for a small lock icon on the panel. This is the first thing to check every time.

2. Door not fully latched

A dishwasher not starting is often just a door that didn’t close all the way. The safety switch won’t let the cycle begin unless the latch clicks into place. Push the door firmly until you hear that click. Overfilled racks can block the door from closing completely — check for tall items near the edges.

3. Delayed start mode set

Someone may have accidentally hit the delayed start button. The display might show a countdown or a clock icon. Hold the Cancel button for 3 seconds on most models to clear it. It’s embarrassing how often this is the whole problem — I’ve seen it on plenty of dishwasher repair calls.

4. Blown thermal fuse

The thermal fuse cuts power if the dishwasher overheats. Once it blows, the machine is dead — no lights, no response, nothing. You’ll need to pull the door panel and test continuity with a multimeter. Most fuses run $5-15 in parts. Replacing it is intermediate DIY: you’re comfortable with basic wiring and following a diagram.

5. Faulty door latch switch

The latch itself can click just fine while the switch behind it has failed. The latch is mechanical; the switch is electrical. Even if the door feels secure, a broken switch sends no signal to the control board, so the dishwasher won’t start. You can test the switch with a multimeter for continuity. Parts usually run $20-40.

6. Faulty control board

A failed control board shows up in weird ways — lights on but no response, buttons that do nothing, random error codes. The dishwasher has power but won’t do anything with it. This is not a DIY fix for most people. Control board replacement costs $150-300 in parts alone, so on an older unit it may not make financial sense.

7. Tripped breaker or GFCI outlet

Check your electrical panel for a tripped breaker in the dishwasher circuit. Also look under the kitchen sink — some dishwashers plug into a GFCI outlet with a reset button. Press the reset button and try again. If the breaker keeps tripping, there’s a bigger electrical problem and you need a technician.

How to troubleshoot a dishwasher that won't start

Run through these steps in order before calling anyone. Most dishwasher not starting situations resolve at step 1, 2, or 4.

  1. Check the child lock setting. Look for a lock icon on the panel and hold the designated button 3 seconds to disable it.
  2. Check the door latch. Push the door firmly and listen for a distinct click. Remove any dishes blocking the door from closing flush.
  3. Cancel delayed start. Hold the Cancel button 3 seconds. If a countdown was running, this clears it.
  4. Check the breaker panel and the GFCI outlet under the sink. Reset if tripped, then try again.
  5. Run a hard reset. Unplug the dishwasher or flip the breaker off. Wait 5 minutes. Restore power and test.

If none of those work, you’re into thermal fuse or control board territory. Both require pulling the door panel. The thermal fuse test is straightforward with a multimeter — intermediate DIY. The control board is more involved and the part is expensive enough that you’ll want a diagnosis first.

service-dishwasher
Technician repairing a dishwasher in a Dunedin kitchen

When to call a dishwasher repair technician

Call a technician when the easy checks don’t pan out. If the door is latching, the breaker is fine, there’s no delayed start set, and the child lock is off — and the dishwasher still won’t start — you’ve got a parts failure. That means getting inside the machine.

A few specific situations where you shouldn’t wait. If the dishwasher was leaking water before it stopped starting, don’t just reset it and hope. Water near the control board can cause a short, and running it again risks more damage. Same goes for any visible burn marks or a burning smell near the control panel.

Error codes on the display are worth writing down before you call — they tell a technician exactly where to start. Control board replacement runs $150-300 in parts plus labor. On a dishwasher that’s 10+ years old, that repair cost sometimes gets close to replacement cost, so it’s worth an honest conversation about the unit’s age before approving the work.

Dishwasher won't start in Tampa Bay, FL?

Perfect Appliance Repair Tampa diagnoses dishwashers same day across the Tampa Bay area. Most no-start calls come down to a door latch switch or a blown thermal fuse — both quick fixes, and the common parts ride on the truck. You’ll get a straight answer on what’s wrong and what it costs before we touch anything.

Mike has 19 years in the trade. No upsell, no runaround. If the repair doesn’t make sense on an older unit, he’ll tell you that too. Call Perfect Appliance Repair Tampa to book a same-day appointment.

Common questions about dishwasher not starting

Why won't my dishwasher start but has power?

If the lights are on but nothing happens, the most likely causes are child lock activated, a delayed start that's counting down, or a faulty door latch switch that's not sending a signal to the control board. Run through those three first. If the panel is completely unresponsive despite having power, the control board may have failed.

It varies by brand. On most Bosch models, press and hold the 'Lock' button for 3 seconds. On GE and Whirlpool units, look for a button labeled 'Control Lock' or a lock icon and hold it for 3 seconds. Check your model's manual if you're not sure — it's listed under the control panel section.

A hum usually means the motor is getting power but something is stopping the cycle from running. A stuck door latch switch is common here. The motor tries to spin, can't proceed without a confirmed latch signal, and stalls. A faulty drain pump can also cause this. If it hums on every attempt, stop running it and have a technician check it.

The simplest reset is a hard power cycle: unplug the dishwasher or flip the circuit breaker off, wait 5 minutes, then restore power. On most models you can also press and hold the Start button for 3 seconds to cancel a cycle. For a full factory reset, check your model's manual — the button combination varies.

It depends on the cause and the unit's age. A door latch switch or thermal fuse is a cheap fix on any age machine. A control board on a 12-year-old dishwasher is harder to justify — parts alone run $150-300 and a new entry-level unit starts around $400-500. Perfect Appliance Repair Tampa gives you an honest assessment before you commit to anything.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *