Dryer High Severity
HE Appliance Error Code

Maytag Dryer HE Error: Heating element fault

What Does Maytag Dryer Error Code HE Mean? HE indicates a heating element fault on Maytag electric dryers — including Bravos XL and MEDB series models. The control board monitors exhaust temperature during a heat cycle and expects a measurable temperature rise within a set time window. When the exhaust temperature does not rise as […]

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

No. HE means the electric dryer cannot heat. Running the machine does not cause harm but produces no useful drying result — clothes will remain wet.

Can I reset the code?

No. HE caused by a broken element, open thermal fuse, or failed thermostat requires physical component replacement. No reset clears a genuine element circuit fault.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: No heat confirmed across multiple test cycles, Burning smell from element area before HE appeared.

Symptoms You May Notice

No heat on any electric cycle

Clothes tumble but remain cold or at room temperature. The element is not energizing on any heat setting including High Heat.

HE displayed during or at end of heat cycle

The board monitors the exhaust temperature rise during a heat cycle. If temperature does not increase as expected, HE is logged and displayed.

Cycle times double or triple with no drying progress

Because the element is not heating, the moisture sensor never detects dryness and the auto-dry cycle continues until the maximum time limit is reached.

Element not glowing when active

Looking through the dryer's rear exhaust area reveals no visible glow from the heating element during a heated cycle.

Possible Causes

1

Broken heating element

The nichrome heating coil inside the element housing has a break in its conductor. This is an open circuit — the element cannot carry current and generates no heat.

Requires Professional
2

Tripped or open thermal fuse

The thermal fuse — a one-shot safety device on the heating element housing — has blown due to a past overheating event. Once blown, the thermal fuse interrupts the element circuit permanently until replaced.

Requires Professional
3

Failed cycling thermostat

The cycling thermostat on the element housing has failed open, breaking the heating circuit. The element itself may be functional but cannot receive power through the failed thermostat.

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

    Confirm no heat is produced

    Run a small load on the High Heat setting for 10 minutes. At the end of the timed run, reach into the drum and feel the drum wall and laundry — both should be noticeably warm. If the drum is cold, heat is confirmed absent and HE diagnosis is needed.

    Do not assume the dryer is working on a lower heat setting if it fails on High — a failed element produces no heat on any setting.

  2. 2

    Check that L2 is not also present

    A lost L2 supply leg mimics a heating element fault — the element is functional but receives no power. Check that the circuit breaker is fully on both legs (see L2 code above) before concluding the element has failed. This rules out a supply issue before scheduling an element replacement.

    L2 and HE can occur together if a partial supply issue caused a thermal fuse to blow. Addressing supply first prevents a repeat thermal fuse failure after replacement.

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • Heating element continuity testing and replacement
  • Thermal fuse testing and replacement (non-resettable)
  • Cycling thermostat testing and replacement

Need Professional Help?

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