Lennox Merit series furnaces , including the ML193, ML180, ML14XC1 air conditioner pairing, and the SL280 in the Merit tier , use a single diagnostic LED on the control board to communicate fault codes. In the 2024 and 2025 production runs, Lennox standardized the LED blink pattern across the Merit lineup. If your furnace isn’t heating and there’s a blinking light on the board, this guide tells you exactly what each sequence means and what to do about it.
What Does a Lennox Merit Series Furnace Error Code Mean?
The diagnostic LED is located on the furnace control board, visible through the small window on the lower access door. You do not need to open the cabinet to read it. The LED blinks a pattern: count the first sequence of rapid blinks, pause, then count again. The number of blinks in the first group is your fault code. A continuous slow flash (once per second) means normal operation; a continuous rapid flash means the board has lost power or has failed.
All Lennox Merit Series LED Flash Codes
1 Flash , Normal Operation / No Call for Heat The system is in standby. Not a fault. The control board is powered and waiting for a thermostat call. If you expect heat and only see 1 flash, check your thermostat settings.
2 Flashes , System Lockout (Exceeded Retry Limit) The furnace tried to ignite multiple times (typically three attempts) and failed every time. It is now locked out for safety. The igniter, gas valve, or flame sensor is likely the cause. Reset the furnace by cutting power for 30 seconds at the breaker, then restore. If it locks out again, diagnose the ignition system.
3 Flashes , Draft Pressure Fault / Pressure Switch Open The pressure switch is not closing, meaning the inducer motor is not building enough draft pressure. Causes include: a blocked flue or drain line, a cracked or disconnected pressure switch hose, a failed pressure switch, or a failed inducer motor. On Merit series furnaces with PVC flue piping, check for ice blockages at the outdoor termination in winter.
4 Flashes , Open High-Limit Device The primary heat exchanger limit switch has tripped open. The furnace overheated. Common causes: dirty air filter (most common), blocked supply or return air registers, failed blower motor, incorrect blower speed setting, or a cracked heat exchanger causing recirculation of hot gases. Replace the filter first. If the fault returns after the filter is clean, suspect the blower or heat exchanger.
5 Flashes , Flame Sensed When No Flame Should Exist (False Flame) The control board detected a flame signal from the flame sensor when it had not commanded ignition. This usually means the gas valve is leaking through (stuck open) or there is electrical leakage in the flame sense circuit. This is a safety-critical fault. Do not reset and run the furnace , call a technician.
6 Flashes , Open Rollout Switch The rollout limit switch has tripped. Rollout switches are manually-resetting thermal fuses positioned near the burners that trip if flames roll out of the combustion chamber. Causes: cracked heat exchanger, blocked flue, or a failed induced draft motor. A rollout switch trip always warrants professional inspection , cracked heat exchangers are a carbon monoxide risk.
7 Flashes , Ignition Lockout (Gas or Igniter Failure) The furnace ignited but the flame did not prove at the flame sensor within the proving window. This differs from Code 2 (which is the full retry lockout) , Code 7 specifically indicates the flame was not detected even though the igniter and gas valve activated. The flame rod/sensor is dirty or failed, or gas pressure is low. Clean the flame rod with fine steel wool.
8 Flashes , Control Board Fault The control board has detected an internal fault. Possible causes include a failed board, a wiring harness problem, or a shorted component connected to the board. Replace the board if all external wiring checks out.
9 Flashes , Low-Stage Pressure Switch Stuck Closed (Two-Stage Systems) On Merit series furnaces with two-stage gas valves, the low-stage pressure switch is reading closed when the inducer is off, which indicates the switch is stuck or shorted. This can also indicate a wiring fault at the pressure switch terminals.
Continuous Rapid Blink (No Pause) , Control Board Has No Power The board is receiving inadequate or no 24V power. Check the transformer, the fuse on the control board (typically a 3-amp automotive-style fuse), and the wiring from the transformer to the board.
How to Fix It
- Read the code carefully. Watch the LED for a full 30 seconds to confirm the count. The pause between sequences is about 2–3 seconds on Merit boards.
- Replace the air filter. This is the fix for approximately 40% of 4-flash (high-limit) calls on Merit furnaces. A clogged 1-inch filter causes more service calls than any other single issue.
- Check the flue termination. Go outside and visually confirm the PVC exhaust pipe is clear. A bird’s nest, ice plug, or debris cap will cause immediate 3-flash faults.
- Inspect pressure switch hoses. On 2024–2025 Merit models, the pressure switch hose runs from the inducer housing to the switch body. Look for cracks, kinks, or disconnected ends. Replace with 3/8-inch ID vinyl tubing if damaged.
- Clean the flame sensor. A dark or corroded rod causes 7-flash (false no-flame) faults. Pull the sensor, rub the rod lightly with fine steel wool or 400-grit emery cloth, and reinstall.
- Reset the pressure switch manually (Code 3). On some Merit models, the pressure switch has a small reset button. If tripped, press it with a ballpoint pen tip. Re-check after the blower fully evacuates air from the heat exchanger.
- Replace the igniter (Code 2). Silicon carbide igniters on 2024–2025 Merit furnaces have a typical life of 4–7 years. If the igniter doesn’t glow bright orange during the ignition trial, replace it.
- Code 5 or 6 , stop and call. These two codes indicate potentially dangerous conditions. Do not reset and run.
Parts You May Need
| Part | Use | Buy on Amazon |
|---|---|---|
| Lennox/Universal Hot Surface Igniter (Norton 271N) | Replace failed igniter causing Code 2 or 7 | View on Amazon |
| Furnace Flame Sensor Rod (universal 1/4” terminal) | Replace or clean corroded flame sensor causing Code 7 | View on Amazon |
| 3/8” ID Vinyl Pressure Switch Hose (5 ft) | Replace cracked pressure switch tubing causing Code 3 | View on Amazon |
| Furnace Pressure Switch (universal .50 WC single-stage) | Replace failed pressure switch after hose checks out | View on Amazon |
| 16x25x1 MERV-8 Air Filter (6-pack) | Clear high-limit fault by restoring airflow | View on Amazon |
| Multimeter with Microamp DC Setting | Test flame sensor current (should read 1–10 μA when proven) | View on Amazon |
When to Call a Pro
Call a licensed HVAC technician when:
- 5-flash code appears. A stuck-open gas valve or false flame signal is a gas safety hazard.
- 6-flash code appears. Rollout switch trips always require professional inspection for heat exchanger cracks , carbon monoxide exposure is the risk.
- 4-flash code returns after you replaced the filter and confirmed clean registers. A failed blower motor or cracked heat exchanger requires pressure testing and combustion analysis.
- 2-flash lockout returns within 48 hours of reset. Repeated ignition lockouts mean the root cause , bad igniter, failing gas valve, or insufficient gas pressure , hasn’t been fixed.
- 8-flash code appears. Control board replacement should be confirmed by a tech who can rule out external short circuits that would destroy a new board.
FAQ
Q: My Lennox Merit furnace shows a 3-flash code but the flue and pressure hoses look fine , what else should I check? A: On Merit series furnaces, condensate drain blockages can create false 3-flash codes. The secondary heat exchanger drains into a trap. If the trap is blocked with algae or debris, condensate backs up, water enters the pressure hose, and the switch reads the water column as insufficient draft. Blow out the condensate drain with a wet-dry vac.
Q: How do I reset a Lennox Merit furnace that’s in lockout? A: Cut power at the breaker or at the furnace disconnect switch. Wait 30 seconds, then restore power. The board resets. If you only have a thermostat with a reset option, set it to OFF, wait 30 seconds, and set it back to HEAT. Full power cycling is more reliable.
Q: Can I replace a Lennox Merit control board with a universal aftermarket board? A: For straightforward single-stage Merit models, universal boards (like the ICM Controls ICM280 or White-Rodgers 50A65-475) are viable at a fraction of OEM cost. For two-stage or variable-speed Merit furnaces, use OEM or exact-match replacements , the blower motor communication protocol is proprietary.
Q: The LED on my 2025 Merit furnace blinks 4 times even with a new, clean filter. What’s wrong? A: Check all supply and return air registers , make sure none are blocked by furniture or closed off. Also check the blower wheel: pull the blower drawer and visually inspect the squirrel cage for debris buildup. A dirty blower wheel moves 25–40% less air than a clean one and triggers high-limit faults identically to a clogged filter.