Carrier Error Code 33 — What It Means
Carrier error code 33 is a limit circuit fault — the furnace’s high limit switch or flame rollout switch has opened, cutting off the burner to prevent overheating or fire. On most Carrier furnace control boards, code 33 displays as 3 LED flashes followed by 3 flashes (a 3-3 blink pattern). The furnace will attempt to restart but lockout persists until the underlying cause is resolved.
This code covers two related but distinct safeties:
- High limit switch — trips when the heat exchanger temperature exceeds ~200°F, usually from restricted airflow
- Flame rollout switch — trips when flames escape the combustion area (rollout), a serious condition requiring immediate inspection
In 80% of cases, a clogged air filter is the root cause. Check that first before anything else.
Common Causes
- Dirty or clogged air filter — Restricted airflow causes the heat exchanger to overheat and trip the high limit switch. This is by far the most common cause.
- Blocked or closed supply/return vents — Too many closed registers creates the same overheating condition as a dirty filter.
- Faulty high limit switch — The switch itself can fail in the open position, triggering code 33 even when temperatures are normal.
- Flame rollout — Cracked heat exchanger, blocked flue, or burner misalignment can cause flames to roll out of the combustion chamber, tripping the rollout switch.
- Failed inducer motor — A weak or seized inducer motor reduces combustion airflow, causing overheating.
- Blower motor failure — If the circulating blower isn’t moving air across the heat exchanger, temperatures spike rapidly.
Step-by-Step Diagnosis {#fix}
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Check the air filter first — Pull the filter and inspect it. If it’s gray and clogged, replace it immediately. A new filter resolves the majority of code 33 calls. After replacement, turn the furnace off and back on.
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Check all supply and return vents — Walk the house and verify every register is open. A common mistake is closing too many vents in unused rooms, which creates backpressure and overheating.
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Let the furnace cool for 30 minutes — If the high limit switch tripped due to overheating, it must cool down before it will reset. After cooling and with a clean filter installed, attempt a restart.
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Locate and inspect the high limit switch — The limit switch is usually a disc-shaped or cylindrical component mounted on the heat exchanger plenum. With power off, use a multimeter set to continuity/resistance. A good limit switch reads near 0Ω (closed). An open reading (infinite resistance) when cold indicates a failed switch.
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Inspect for flame rollout signs — Open the burner compartment and look for soot, scorch marks, or discoloration around the burner area or on the burner box walls. Any evidence of rollout is a serious safety issue — stop and call a technician.
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Check the inducer motor — Start the furnace and listen for the inducer to spin up before ignition. A slow, grinding, or non-starting inducer causes code 33. You can confirm with amp draw testing.
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Inspect the flue/vent pipe — A blocked or disconnected vent pipe prevents proper draft and can cause both overheating and rollout. Check the entire vent path from the furnace to where it exits the building.
How to Fix It
Dirty filter: Replace with the correct size filter. Check it every 30–60 days going forward.
Faulty high limit switch: Disconnect power, remove the 2-wire connector from the switch, replace the switch. Most Carrier furnaces use a universal 190°F or 200°F limit switch — match the temperature rating on the old switch.
Failed blower motor: The blower motor can be tested with a multimeter for continuity across windings. If seized or open, replace the motor or the entire blower assembly.
Flame rollout switch: If only the rollout switch tripped (not the high limit), there may be a manual-reset button on the switch — a small red button. Press it once after the burner area has cooled completely. If it trips again immediately, do not reset it again. A cracked heat exchanger or blocked flue is the likely cause and requires professional repair.
Inducer motor failure: Replace the inducer motor assembly. This is a moderate DIY repair — power off, remove the vent connection, unscrew the inducer housing, swap the motor.
Parts You May Need
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Furnace Air Filter | Check size on existing filter label; replace every 1–3 months |
| Furnace High Limit Switch | Match temperature rating (usually 190°F or 200°F) and mounting style |
| Flame Rollout Switch | Verify amperage rating; some Carrier models use manual-reset type |
| Furnace Inducer Motor | Match HP, voltage, and RPM from OEM label |
| Furnace Blower Motor | Check HP, voltage, and RPM; direct-drive vs. belt-drive varies by model |
When to Call a Technician
If you see soot, scorch marks, or discoloration in the burner compartment — stop. This indicates actual flame rollout, which can mean a cracked heat exchanger. A cracked heat exchanger allows combustion gases (including carbon monoxide) to enter your living space. Do not run the furnace until a qualified HVAC technician has inspected and pressure-tested the heat exchanger. This is a safety emergency, not a DIY repair.
Also call a tech if code 33 returns immediately after replacing the high limit switch and filter — there’s an underlying airflow or combustion problem that needs professional diagnosis.