Washer Low Severity
SUD Appliance Error Code

KitchenAid Washer SUD Error: Too Many Suds Detected

What Does KitchenAid Washer Error Code Sud Mean? Sud on a KitchenAid washer indicates the board has detected excessive suds during the wash or spin cycle. High-efficiency washers use very little water and are sensitive to suds levels — too much foam can compromise cleaning performance and rinsing. The board automatically pauses the cycle and […]

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

Yes. Sud is an operational alert, not a fault. The washer continues to work and automatically clears excess suds. Use less detergent on future loads.

Can I reset the code?

Yes. The washer clears Sud automatically once suds drop to acceptable levels. No manual intervention is needed.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: Suds visible inside the cabinet or leaking from the washer, Sud appears on every cycle despite reduced detergent.

Symptoms You May Notice

Wash cycle pauses and extends time

The displayed cycle time increases rather than decreases as the washer runs extra rinse and drain cycles to clear suds from the tub.

Visible suds rising from the dispenser area

Foam is escaping from the detergent dispenser or spilling from the top of the tub into the cabinet. Heavy suds are visually obvious.

Cycle takes significantly longer than expected

A wash that normally takes 60 minutes runs for 90 or 120 minutes as the board repeats drain and rinse cycles until suds levels drop.

Possible Causes

1

Too much detergent used

More detergent was added than the load size or soil level needs. HE (High Efficiency) washers require much less detergent than traditional washers — typically 1–2 tablespoons per load.

DIY Possible
2

Non-HE detergent used in an HE washer

Regular (non-HE) detergent produces far more suds than HE washers can handle. Always use HE-marked detergent in any front-load or high-efficiency top-load washer.

DIY Possible
3

Detergent dispenser dirty or dispensing excess

A clogged or gummed-up dispenser can release excess detergent into the tub. Cleaning the dispenser drawer resolves this.

DIY Possible

Safe Checks You Can Do

These checks are safe for homeowners. No disassembly required. Do not remove panels or access internal components.
  1. 1

    Use less detergent on the next wash

    For the next wash, measure only 1–2 tablespoons of HE-marked detergent per load. This is roughly 25–50% of what older washers needed. The washer will wash just as effectively with much less soap.

    Most detergent bottles have fill-line markings calibrated for older top-load washers. Ignore those for HE washers — use a dedicated measuring cup.

  2. 2

    Clean the detergent dispenser

    Remove the detergent dispenser drawer (if removable) and clean it in warm water to remove accumulated residue. A clean dispenser releases detergent more consistently.

    Monthly dispenser cleaning is part of recommended washer maintenance and prevents many Sud errors.

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • Pressure sensor misreading suds as water level
  • Dispenser mechanism failure releasing excess detergent
  • Sud persisting after all detergent and dispenser fixes

Need Professional Help?

Find qualified technicians in your area for proper diagnostics and repair.

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