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Emerson / White-Rodgers Thermostat E1 Error — Fault Code Guide

⚡ Quick Answer

Emerson and White-Rodgers thermostat E1 error means a sensor fault or power issue. This guide covers all Emerson E1 variations and how to fix them by model.

Emerson / White-Rodgers Thermostat E1 Error

The E1 error on Emerson and White-Rodgers thermostats covers several different faults depending on the model series. Emerson (which acquired White-Rodgers) uses E1 to indicate:

E1 by Model Series

Model SeriesE1 Meaning
1F80 (non-programmable)Indoor sensor open or shorted
1F86 (programmable)Indoor sensor fault
1F95 (touchscreen)Indoor or outdoor sensor fault
UP500W (universal)Sensor fault (indoor temp)
Sensi ST55U / ST75USee separate Sensi guide
1E78 (2-wire)Power/low voltage

Indoor Sensor Fault — Most Common E1

The indoor air temperature sensor is built into the thermostat housing. It’s a thermistor (temperature-sensitive resistor) that changes resistance with temperature. When the thermostat reads the sensor as open circuit (very high resistance) or short circuit (very low resistance), E1 appears.

Causes of Sensor Fault

Testing the Internal Sensor

At normal room temperature (70°F / 21°C), the sensor should read approximately:

To test: remove the thermostat from the wall, disconnect it from wiring, open the back panel (on models that allow it), and measure resistance across the sensor leads. If you read 0 or infinite resistance, the sensor is failed.

What to Do When E1 Appears

Step 1 — Note the room temperature. If your home is genuinely outside the sensor’s range (below 32°F or above 110°F), E1 may be a legitimate reading, not a fault.

Step 2 — Remove and reattach the thermostat. Sometimes vibration or brief power interruption triggers a temporary E1. Disconnect from wall plate for 30 seconds, reattach.

Step 3 — Inspect for physical damage. Look for cracks in the housing, signs of water intrusion, or burn marks. Any of these means replacement.

Step 4 — Check wiring. A wiring short that puts high voltage on the thermostat’s sensing circuit can damage the sensor. Verify wiring is correct — only 18–24V class 2 wiring should be connected.

Step 5 — Replace the thermostat. Internal sensors on Emerson/White-Rodgers thermostats are not user-serviceable. If the sensor has failed, replace the unit.

ModelPriceFeatures
Emerson 1F86U$25–40Direct replacement, programmable
Emerson UP500W$50–70Universal, touchscreen
Emerson Sensi ST75U$70–100Wi-Fi, app control
White-Rodgers 1F78$15–25Budget, non-programmable

E1 vs. E2 on Emerson

If you see E2 on an Emerson thermostat with an outdoor sensor probe, the fix is to replace the remote sensor, not the thermostat itself.


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