E17
Siemens Washing Machine
Urgency
⚡ Medium
Attend to soon
Repair difficulty
🔧 Competent DIY
Some experience required
Diagnosis

What this error means

Water supply fault — machine not filling with sufficient water flow

The E17 error means the machine is not receiving enough water to fill within the expected time. This is most commonly caused by a closed or partially open water tap, a kinked inlet hose, or a blocked inlet filter mesh. A faulty solenoid inlet valve can also produce this fault.

⚠️
For information purposes only. Always consult a qualified engineer before attempting repairs. 🔌 Unplug your appliance before any inspection or repair.
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What to try first
Fix time
5–10 minutes
🔧
Difficulty
Competent DIY
🏠
Appliance
Washing Machine

What you'll need first

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Step-by-step

1
Locate the water supply tap on the wall behind or beside the machine and ensure it is turned fully anti-clockwise to the fully open position
2
Carefully pull the machine forward and trace the inlet hose from the tap to the back of the machine
Straighten any kinks or tight bends
3
Turn the tap off, unscrew the inlet hose from the back of the machine and inspect the small mesh filter inside the connection port
Rinse it clean under running water if blocked
4
Reattach the hose securely, turn the tap fully on and run a short programme to test
Diagnostic

Symptoms to look for

  1. Machine pauses at the very start of a cycle without filling
  2. Programme runs but takes far longer than the time shown on the display
  3. Drum feels dry or barely damp after the first 5 minutes of a programme
  4. E17 displayed shortly after a programme is started
Step-by-step repair guide

How to fix it

Time 20–35 minutes
Skill Competent DIY
Confirm the water tap is fully open

Find the isolation tap on the cold water supply pipe behind or under the machine. It is usually a straight-slot screw or quarter-turn lever valve. Turn it fully anti-clockwise. If uncertain whether it moved, close it fully clockwise then reopen anti-clockwise.

Water is under mains pressure at the supply tap. Have a towel ready before loosening any hose connections as water will escape immediately.
Straighten the inlet hose

Pull the machine carefully away from the wall by holding the machine body — never drag it by the hose. Run your hand along the full length of the inlet hose. Straighten any kinks or tight bends. Push the machine back into position while watching the hose to ensure it does not kink again behind the machine.

If the hose kinks every time the machine is pushed back, fit a 90-degree hose elbow connector at the machine inlet. These cost a few pounds from any appliance parts supplier and resolve this permanently.
Clean the inlet filter mesh

Turn the tap fully off. Fold a towel under the hose connection at the back of the machine. Unscrew the hose fitting anti-clockwise — water will drip out as you loosen it. Inside the machine's inlet port you will see a small cylindrical mesh filter. Grip it with tweezers or fine-nose pliers and pull it straight out. Rinse it under running water, scrubbing gently with an old toothbrush to clear any limescale deposits. Push it firmly back in, reattach the hose and hand-tighten plus a quarter turn with pliers.

Do not run the machine without the mesh filter in place. It protects the inlet valve from grit and debris that would cause permanent damage to the valve seat.
Check the supply water pressure

With the hose disconnected from the machine but still attached to the tap, point the open end into a bucket and briefly open the tap for 3 seconds. You should see a strong, steady, uninterrupted flow. A weak or intermittent trickle means a supply pressure issue rather than a machine fault — contact your water supplier.

Water pressure is often lower in upper-floor flats. If this is a recurring problem, a plumber can assess whether a pressure booster is needed.
Inspect the inlet valve

With the machine completely unplugged and the water turned off, remove the rear panel by undoing the screws around its edge. The inlet valve is located where the hose attaches internally — a block with one or two solenoid coils. Examine the coils for corrosion or burn marks.

Only access the inlet valve with the machine fully unplugged. The solenoid coils carry mains voltage during operation.
Run a test cycle

Reassemble everything, turn the water supply fully on and start a standard 40-degree programme. Watch the first 3 minutes — you should hear water entering and the programme timer should begin counting down.

If the machine fills slowly but eventually reaches level, the filter needs a deeper clean with a proprietary descaling product run through an empty cycle.
Did this solve your issue?
Escalation

When to call an engineer

  • Water pressure confirmed adequate at the tap but fault persists after filter cleaning
  • Inlet valve solenoid fails a continuity test with a multimeter
  • Valve is not opening despite receiving power — confirmed by multimeter testing
  • Wiring to the inlet valve is visibly corroded, damaged, or the connector is burnt
Common questions

Frequently asked questions

Why does E17 show even though the water is connected?
The flow rate may be too slow rather than absent — a partially closed tap or partially blocked filter restricts flow enough to trigger the timeout even when water is present.
Can limescale cause E17?
Yes. In hard water areas, limescale gradually builds up inside the filter mesh and inlet valve, narrowing the water path. Clean the filter every 3 months and descale the machine every 3 to 6 months.
Does E17 mean there is no water at all?
Not necessarily — the machine may receive some water but not enough to fill within the allowed time window, which also triggers this error.
Is it safe to inspect the inlet valve myself?
You can inspect it safely with the machine unplugged and the water turned off. Any electrical testing of the solenoid coils must only be done with the power disconnected.

🎯 What is likely causing this fault?

💧
Flow meter 45%
💧
Supply issue 30%
🔧
Valve 15%
📡
PCB 10%

⚠️ Estimates based on common faults — not a guaranteed diagnosis. Always verify before ordering parts.

🔩

Parts you may need

Enter your model number to filter results to your exact machine

Usually found on a label inside the door frame or on the back panel of the machine.

No model entered
Part Approx. UK Cost Find it
Inlet Valve £15 - £30
Inlet Valve £15 - £30

ℹ️ Prices are approximate. Always check the part number matches your model before ordering. Not sure of your model number? Find out how to locate it here.