LG Washer IE Error Code — What It Means
The IE error code on an LG washer stands for Water Inlet Error. It appears when the washer cannot fill with water or fails to reach the required level within the time limit. The control board detects that fill is too slow or insufficient and stops the cycle to prevent a fault condition.
This code does not mean the machine is broken. In most cases it points to a restriction or supply problem outside the washer itself: closed valves, kinked hoses, clogged screens, low house water pressure, or frozen lines in cold weather. Once you restore adequate water flow to the machine, the error typically clears.
Common Causes
- Water supply valves closed or only partly open Both hot and cold shutoff faucets at the wall must be turned fully counterclockwise to supply the washer.
- Kinked, crushed, or frozen inlet hoses Hoses bent behind the washer or frozen in an unheated space prevent water from reaching the machine in time.
- Clogged inlet screen filters Small mesh screens at the washer’s water connections trap sediment and rust, reducing flow below the threshold.
- Low house water pressure or flow Insufficient supply pressure from the plumbing system slows fill and triggers the timeout.
- Drain hose inserted too deep into standpipe LG specifies that insertion deeper than 4 in (10 cm) can siphon water out as fast as the washer fills it.
- Faulty water inlet valve assembly When supply, hoses, and screens are all good but fill still fails, the solenoid valve inside the washer may be stuck or electrically open.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Check both supply faucets at the wall behind or beside the washer and turn each one fully open (counterclockwise until it stops).
- Inspect the inlet hoses for kinks, sharp bends, crushing under the washer feet, or signs of freezing, and straighten or reroute as needed.
- Clean the inlet screens by shutting off both faucets, disconnecting the supply hoses at the washer, pulling the small mesh filters out of each inlet port with needle-nose pliers, rinsing them under a faucet, and pressing them back into place before reconnecting the hoses.
- Verify drain hose depth by measuring how far the corrugated drain hose extends into the standpipe or laundry sink; if it is deeper than 4 in (10 cm), pull it back to prevent siphoning during fill.
- Test supply flow by disconnecting the hoses at the washer and holding each hose end over a bucket while you open the faucet; strong flow from both lines confirms the house plumbing is adequate.
- Replace the water inlet valve if all supply-side checks pass but the washer still will not fill; the valve is mounted at the rear of the cabinet where the hoses connect and typically requires a screwdriver and quarter-inch nut driver to remove.
- Run a rinse-and-spin cycle after repairs to confirm the washer fills normally and the IE code does not return.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Water inlet valve assembly | Amazon | Match your model number; most LG washers use a dual-solenoid valve with push-on hose barbs and a wiring harness. |
| Inlet hose set (hot and cold) | Amazon | Replace if kinked, cracked, or internally restricted; choose reinforced stainless-steel braided hoses for durability. |
| Inlet screen filters | Amazon | Available as spares if the originals are torn or missing; sold in pairs for hot and cold ports. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a professional if you have confirmed that both faucets are open, hoses are clear, screens are clean, and drain depth is correct but the IE code persists. A technician can test the inlet valve with a multimeter, verify control-board signals, and check the pressure sensor and associated wiring. Also call for help if you are uncomfortable working with water connections, do not have space to pull the washer forward, or if the valve replacement does not resolve the fault and deeper electronic diagnosis is required.