KitchenAid Range F3 Error Code — What It Means
The F3 error code on a KitchenAid range signals a problem in the oven temperature sensing circuit. KitchenAid ties this code family to the oven temperature sensor probe, the wiring harness and connectors between the sensor and control, or the electronic control board itself. Some models also monitor a warming drawer sensor, which can trigger the same code. The exact subcode (such as F3 E2 or F3 E0) depends on your model, but all F3 faults point to a temperature-sensing issue that prevents the oven from reading or regulating heat correctly.
The code does not usually indicate a heating element problem. Instead, the control has lost reliable communication with the sensor that monitors oven cavity temperature. Until the fault is repaired, the oven will not heat or will shut down to prevent runaway temperatures.
Common Causes
- Failed oven temperature sensor probe The RTD sensor at the back of the oven cavity drifts out of specification, reads open, or shorts internally.
- Loose, damaged, or burnt wiring and connectors The harness between the sensor and control develops breaks, corrosion, or loose terminal fit that interrupts the signal.
- Warming drawer sensor fault (equipped models) On ranges with a warming drawer, a second sensor monitors that zone and shares the same circuit family.
- Electronic control board failure After sensor and wiring test good, the control’s own sensing circuitry, solder joints, or board traces can fail.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Switch off power at the circuit breaker and wait one full minute, then restore power to see if the code clears on its own.
- Pull the range forward and remove the rear access panel or lower drawer to reach the oven temperature sensor, wiring, and control board.
- Inspect the sensor harness from the probe through the connectors for burnt insulation, breaks, corrosion, or loose pins.
- Disconnect the sensor connector and measure resistance across the sensor terminals with a multimeter at room temperature (target is approximately 1,080 ohms or 1.0–1.1 kΩ).
- Check wiring continuity from the sensor connector to the control board connector to confirm no open or intermittent connections.
- Replace the sensor if resistance is far out of range, open, or shorted, then reassemble and test for code recurrence.
- Replace the electronic control board if the sensor and all wiring test within specification and connector seating is confirmed, then verify operation.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Oven temperature sensor (RTD probe) | Amazon | Match the sensor to your exact KitchenAid model number; connector style and mounting bracket vary by series. |
| Sensor wiring harness | Amazon | Order if insulation is melted, wires are broken, or connector housings are cracked. |
| Electronic control board (ERC / clock) | Amazon | Required only after sensor and harness test good; verify board part number from the label on your existing control. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a qualified appliance technician if you are uncomfortable working with 240 V circuits, cannot safely access the rear of the range, or lack a multimeter to measure sensor resistance. A professional will cross-reference your exact model’s tech sheet to confirm resistance and voltage specifications, systematically test each component in the sensing circuit, and carry OEM replacement sensors and control boards on the truck. If the fault involves intermittent solder-joint cracks or board-level repair, a technician can also evaluate whether board-level service is cost-effective compared to replacement.