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Goodman Furnace Not Heating - Causes & Fix

4 min read
⚡ Quick Answer

Most often a dirty flame sensor prevents ignition lockout. Clean the sensor rod with fine steel wool, then check the LED code.

Difficulty Pro recommended
Est. time 1-3 hrs

Goodman Furnace Not Heating — What’s Happening

When a Goodman furnace won’t heat, the control board is typically tracking a fault code shown by LED flashes on the board itself. Common codes include one flash for ignition failure, three flashes for a stuck-open pressure switch, four flashes for an open limit, and eight flashes for ignitor issues. The furnace locks out because it detected a safety condition or a component that did not respond as expected during the call for heat.

The fault code tells you where to start troubleshooting. Without reading the code first, you’re guessing. The board stores the code until power is cycled, so always check the LED before turning breakers off or pulling the door switch. Once you know the code, you can target the exact component or circuit that stopped the heating cycle.

Jump to Fix

Most Likely Causes

How to Diagnose and Fix

  1. Read the LED fault code on the control board before cycling power or opening the blower door, since some boards clear the stored code when power is lost.
  2. Check that the thermostat is calling for heat, the furnace power switch and breaker are on, and the blower-door interlock switch is fully closed.
  3. If the code is one flash (ignition failure), remove and clean the flame-sensor rod with fine steel wool or a non-abrasive pad, then inspect the hot surface igniter for cracks or dim glow.
  4. If the code is three or nine flashes (pressure switch open), inspect both pressure-switch hoses for cracks, water, or disconnections, then confirm the inducer motor is spinning and pulling draft.
  5. If the code is four flashes (open limit), replace the air filter, verify blower operation, and check that supply registers are open and the return grille is not blocked.
  6. If the code is eight flashes (ignitor), test continuity across the igniter element and check the wiring harness and connector at both the igniter and control board.
  7. If the furnace lights but shuts off after a few seconds, measure flame-sensor microamp current during burner operation to confirm the sensor is reading above the minimum threshold (typically 0.5–2 µA).
  8. For gas-valve, rollout-switch, or persistent ignition issues, call a licensed HVAC technician to test gas pressure, inspect the heat exchanger, and verify all combustion-safety circuits.

Parts You Might Need

PartNotes
Flame sensorAmazon | Confirm the rod diameter and mounting bracket match your Goodman model before ordering.
Hot surface igniter (silicon nitride or silicon carbide)Amazon | Match the part number on the old igniter; handle by the ceramic base only to avoid skin oils on the element.
Pressure switchAmazon | Switches are calibrated to specific pressure setpoints; verify the part number and hose-port configuration.

If your appliance also shows a code on the display, these match this problem:

When to Call a Pro

Call a professional if you see a rollout-switch fault (six flashes), smell gas, or find soot or rust inside the burner compartment. Rollout and flame-sensing-when-off codes point to heat-exchanger cracks or gas-valve leaks that require combustion analysis and pressure testing. Likewise, if you’ve cleaned the flame sensor and replaced the igniter but the furnace still locks out on ignition codes, a technician with a manometer and microamp meter can pinpoint valve, grounding, or flame-current problems that are not visible during a basic inspection. For gas line, burner, or igniter work, or if you ever smell gas, stop and call a licensed technician.


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