KitchenAid Dishwasher Not Draining: Causes and Fixes

KitchenAid dishwasher not draining? Learn the common causes of standing water in KDTM, KDTE, and KDPE models, error codes 8-1 and F9 E1, and what you can safely check.

Updated 2026-04-15 Appliance Repair Guide

Key Takeaways

  • Standing water with code 8-1 or F9 E1 indicates the drain pump could not clear the tub within the timeout window.
  • Cleaning the bottom tub filter resolves a significant share of drain complaints before service is needed.
  • A kinked drain hose or a missing high loop is a common installation error that causes repeated drain failures.
  • Drain pump replacement requires accessing the bottom of the dishwasher and is a professional repair.
  • Running the garbage disposal before each wash cycle prevents backflow that mimics a drain fault.

The Bottom Line

Most KitchenAid dishwasher drain problems start with a blocked filter or restricted drain hose. Cleaning the filter and verifying hose routing solves the majority of cases. Persistent 8-1 or F9 E1 codes after those checks point to a drain pump that needs professional service.

KitchenAid Dishwasher Not Draining: What the Error Codes Tell You

When your KitchenAid dishwasher fails to drain properly — leaving standing water in the bottom of the tub after a cycle — the control board has usually logged an error code. KitchenAid Architect Series and PrintShield dishwashers use a dual notation: models with a display show alphanumeric codes like F9 E1, while models without a display use blinking Clean-light patterns to report the same faults. Code 8-1 (eight blinks, pause, one blink) on a blink-code model is the same fault as F9 E1 on a display model.

Quick Diagnosis Table

SymptomError CodeLikely CauseDIY Fix?
Standing water after cycleF9 E1Drain timeout — blocked pathFilter clean yes
Blink pattern 8-18-1Same as F9 E1 on display modelsFilter clean yes
Drain pump audibly runningF9 E1Impeller jammed or hose kinkedInspection yes
No pump sound at allF9 E1Drain pump motor failedNo — service required

Check 1: Clean the Filter

KitchenAid Architect Series dishwashers have a two-part filter at the bottom of the tub. Twist the cylindrical upper filter counter-clockwise, lift it free, and rinse both the cylindrical filter and the flat mesh screen beneath it under warm running water. Stubborn grease dissolves with a few drops of dish soap and a soft brush. F9 E1 and 8-1 codes caused by a clogged filter clear immediately after the next successful drain cycle.

Check 2: Inspect the Drain Hose

The drain hose exiting the back of the dishwasher must form a high loop — rising to the underside of the counter before descending to the disposal or standpipe. A hose that sags below countertop level allows waste water to flow back into the dishwasher. Open the cabinet under the sink and trace the hose routing. Straighten any kinks. On installations connected to a garbage disposal, confirm the plastic knockout plug was removed when the dishwasher was installed — if it was left in place, drainage is physically impossible.

Check 3: Listen for the Drain Pump

Start a Cancel/Drain cycle and listen near the bottom of the dishwasher. A healthy drain pump produces a steady humming sound. Complete silence means the pump is not receiving power or has failed electrically. Loud buzzing without water movement means the pump is trying to run but the impeller is jammed — often by a piece of broken glass, a fruit pit, or similar debris. Both conditions require professional service.

Get an Accurate Quote

When filter cleaning and hose inspection do not restore drainage, our KitchenAid dishwasher repair service replaces the drain pump and verifies full cycle operation. Drain pump replacement starts from $225. The final cost will be confirmed after our technician completes an on-site diagnosis. We provide a clear, written estimate before any work begins — no hidden fees, no surprises.

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