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Frigidaire Washer Water-Level Pressure Switch Replacement

4 min read
⚡ Quick Answer

Overfilling, underfilling, or mid-cycle stopping? A faulty water-level pressure switch fails to signal correct tub levels. Replacing it restores normal fill control.

Difficulty Intermediate (DIY)
Est. time 15-60 min
Tools Multimeter , nut driver, screwdrivers

Frigidaire Washer Water-Level Pressure Switch Replacement — What This Part Does

The water-level pressure switch (or sensor) monitors how much water is in the tub by sensing air pressure through a small hose connected to the tub. When the water rises, it pushes air through the hose into the switch, which then signals the control board to stop filling at the correct level.

This part fails when internal contacts wear out or the sensing element no longer changes state. The air hose can crack, disconnect, or get pinched, breaking the pressure path. Wiring connectors corrode or come loose. When any of these happen, the washer loses its ability to measure water level and fill, wash, or drain cycles go wrong.

Jump to Replacement Steps

Signs It Needs Replacing

How to Replace It

  1. Unplug the washer from the wall outlet and turn off both hot and cold water supply valves behind the machine.
  2. Remove the top panel by unscrewing the two or three screws at the rear top edge, then slide the panel back and lift it off (on some models you may need to release front clips and remove the front panel instead).
  3. Locate the water-level pressure switch mounted near the top or side of the cabinet, often a round or rectangular plastic component with an electrical connector and a small air hose attached.
  4. Inspect the air hose for cracks, kinks, or disconnection at either end and check that the electrical connector is fully seated and not corroded (if the hose is damaged or loose, replace or reconnect it before replacing the switch).
  5. Test the switch by disconnecting the wire connector and using a multimeter set to continuity or ohms to check terminal pairs, then gently blow into the air hose nipple to see if contacts change state (if they do not change, the switch is faulty).
  6. Release the hose clamp with pliers or a screwdriver, pull the air hose off the switch nipple, unplug the electrical connector, and remove the mounting screw or release the retaining tab to free the old switch.
  7. Install the new pressure switch in the same position, secure it with the screw or tab, reconnect the air hose with the clamp, and plug in the electrical connector until it clicks.
  8. Reinstall the top or front panel, tighten all screws, plug the washer back in, turn on the water supply valves, and run a small test cycle to verify that the washer fills to the correct level and stops filling on time.
  9. Watch the first full wash cycle to confirm normal operation and check that no error codes appear.

The Part You Need

PartNotes
Water-level pressure switch (or sensor)Amazon | Check your washer’s model and serial number plate (inside the door rim or on the rear panel) and search that model number with “pressure switch” to find the exact replacement part number for your unit.
Air hose / pressure tubeAmazon | Replace if cracked, split, or hardened (often sold separately or included with some switch kits).

If this part is failing you may also see one of these codes:

When to Call a Pro

If you have replaced the pressure switch and air hose but the washer still overfills, underfills, or throws error codes, the fault is likely in the main control board or the wiring harness between the switch and the board. Diagnosing control-board inputs requires a service manual and specialized test equipment. Call a qualified appliance technician to trace the circuit and determine whether the board itself needs replacement or if there is a hidden wire fault.


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