Lennox E270 Error Code — What It Means
E270 on a Lennox furnace is a Watchguard failure code that signals the control board has shut off the gas valve and locked out after multiple failed ignition attempts. The system could not establish flame after the allowed number of retries, so it stopped trying for safety. The unit information sheet maps E270 directly to ‘gas valve off’ due to this flame-failure lockout condition. In practical terms, the furnace tried to light several times, did not prove flame, and now will not attempt another cycle until the underlying problem is fixed and the system is reset.
Common Causes
- Failed or weak igniter The hot surface igniter is cracked, worn out, or not heating enough to light the gas, so no flame is established during the ignition window.
- Dirty or failed flame sensor The flame sensor cannot prove combustion even if the burners light briefly, causing the board to think ignition failed and shut down.
- Control board failure The main control board has failed and cannot correctly run the ignition sequence or recognize flame, leading to repeated lockouts.
- Gas supply or gas valve issue Gas is not reaching the burners because the manual valve is closed, inlet pressure is low, or the gas valve itself is stuck or defective.
- Loose wiring or corroded connections Terminals at the igniter, flame sensor, gas valve, or board are loose or corroded, breaking the ignition or flame-proving circuit.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Confirm the E270 code at the furnace control board or display before doing anything else, so you know you are addressing the correct fault.
- Check gas supply by verifying the manual gas cock upstream of the furnace is fully open and that other gas appliances in the home are working normally.
- Inspect the igniter for cracks, breaks, or heavy discoloration, and watch it during a call for heat to confirm it glows bright orange before gas is released.
- Examine the flame sensor for soot, corrosion, or a bent position, and clean the metal rod gently with fine emery cloth if fouled.
- Test wiring and connections at the igniter, flame sensor, gas valve, and control board for loose spade terminals, burnt pins, or corrosion.
- Evaluate the control board if all ignition components and gas supply check out, since board failure has been reported as the root cause of E270 in the field.
- Power-cycle the furnace only after identifying and correcting the underlying condition, then observe a full ignition cycle to confirm flame is proven and the code does not return.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Lennox hot surface igniter | Amazon | Match the shape and terminal style to your furnace model, common failure item for no-light lockouts. |
| Lennox flame sensor | Amazon | Rod-style sensor, verify length and mounting bracket fit for your unit if cleaning does not restore signal. |
| Lennox furnace control board | Amazon | Identified as the actual fix in documented E270 cases, confirm board part number from the existing label before ordering. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a licensed HVAC technician if you are not comfortable working around gas appliances, if the igniter and flame sensor both look good but the code persists, or if you suspect a control board or gas valve fault. E270 is a safety lockout that indicates repeated ignition failures, and incorrect diagnosis can leave a dangerous condition in place or damage expensive components. A qualified tech has the meters and experience to measure flame signal, verify gas pressure, and safely test the ignition sequence under live conditions.