Oven High Severity
F3 E0 Appliance Error Code

KitchenAid Oven F3 E0 Error: Upper Oven Sensor Open

What Does KitchenAid Oven Error Code F3 E0 Mean? Error code F3 E0 on a KitchenAid wall oven signals an open circuit on the upper oven temperature sensor (RTD probe). The sensor is a resistance-based device mounted on the back wall of the cavity; the control board continuously measures its resistance to calculate cavity temperature. […]

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

No. Without a functioning temperature sensor the oven cannot prevent overheating. Do not operate the oven in any cooking mode until the sensor is replaced and the fault cleared.

Can I reset the code?

No. F3 E0 is a hardware fault — a breaker reset will not resolve it. The code returns the moment the control board samples the sensor circuit and finds it open. Replacement of the sensor or its harness is required.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: Oven produces burning smells without a visible set temperature on the display, F3 E0 appears on every cook attempt after sensor replacement, pointing to a board fault.

Symptoms You May Notice

Upper oven cavity fails to preheat and shuts off within seconds of starting

The bake or broil element energizes briefly, but without a valid temperature reading the control board immediately cuts power to all heating elements.

Display shows dashes or 0°F in place of the rising preheat temperature

Rather than climbing from room temperature toward the set point, the display either freezes at zero or shows dashes, confirming the sensor signal is absent.

Self-clean cycle will not initiate on a double-wall oven

On KODE double-wall models the upper-cavity self-clean is blocked because the control requires a valid sensor reading before engaging the door latch and high-heat cycle.

Possible Causes

1

Failed upper oven RTD temperature sensor

The resistance-based sensor probe inside the cavity has broken its internal wire, creating an open circuit that the board reads as infinite resistance.

DIY Possible
2

Broken or corroded sensor harness wire

The two-wire harness from the sensor probe to the control board has a break or corroded connector, interrupting the signal path.

DIY Possible
3

Control board sensor input circuit failure

Rarely, the board's own sensor measurement circuit has failed, causing it to read all sensors as open even when the probes are intact.

Requires Professional

Safe Checks You Can Do

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

    Inspect the sensor probe and harness connector

    With the oven fully de-energized and unplugged, locate the RTD probe on the back wall of the upper cavity. Check that its two-pin connector is fully seated and that the harness wires show no visible damage or corrosion.

    Wiggle the connector gently — a loose fit here is a frequent cause of intermittent F3 E0 on KOSE and KODE models.

  2. 2

    Test sensor resistance with a multimeter

    Disconnect the sensor harness from the board side and measure resistance across the sensor's two terminals. A healthy KitchenAid oven RTD reads approximately 1,080–1,100 ohms at room temperature (68°F).

    An open-loop (OL) or extremely high reading confirms the sensor has failed and must be replaced.

    Tools required

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • New replacement sensor still reads open on the multimeter — board input has failed
  • Harness damage extends into the oven body beyond reach of DIY repair
  • Code appears alongside F9 E0 runaway-temperature codes

Need Professional Help?

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

Oven Repair Service Schedule Appointment