E25
Siemens Washing Machine
Urgency
⚡ Medium
Attend to soon
Repair difficulty
🔧 Competent DIY
Some experience required
Diagnosis

What this error means

Turbidity sensor fault — the water clarity sensor is not reading correctly

The E25 error means the turbidity sensor — Which measures how dirty the wash water is to optimise programme performance — is not functioning correctly. This is most commonly caused by the sensor window becoming coated with detergent residue or limescale rather than the sensor itself failing. Excessive foam from overdosing detergent is another frequent cause.

⚠️
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
Run an empty service wash at 90 degrees with a washing machine cleaner or two tablespoons of citric acid powder
Detergent and limescale residue coating the sensor is the most common cause of this fault
2
Unplug the machine, wait 60 seconds, plug back in and retry
A full power reset can clear a temporary sensor signal error
3
Check you are using the correct amount of detergent for your water hardness and load size
Too much detergent causes excess foam which blocks the turbidity sensor's optical reading
4
Follow the service wash with a rinse and spin to flush remaining residue through the system
Diagnostic

Symptoms to look for

  1. E25 displayed during the wash or rinse phase
  2. Programme adding unexpected extra rinses or stopping during the rinse cycle
  3. Machine behaviour is inconsistent — sometimes completing normally, sometimes faulting
  4. Error appears more frequently when using heavily dosed or powder detergents
Step-by-step repair guide

How to fix it

Time 20–40 minutes
Skill Competent DIY
Run a full service wash

Add a washing machine cleaning tablet or 60 g of citric acid powder directly into the drum. Select a 90-degree cotton programme with no laundry inside and run the full cycle. The turbidity sensor sits in the water path and uses an optical beam to measure water clarity — if its window is coated with detergent film or limescale the beam is blocked, generating false fault readings.

Perform a service wash every 1 to 3 months as routine maintenance. It prevents sensor fouling, eliminates drum odours, and keeps the pump filter cleaner between manual cleans.
Reduce your detergent dose

If you routinely use more detergent than the amount indicated for your water hardness, excess foam coats the turbidity sensor and generates repeated false readings. After the service wash, reduce your dose to the line marked for your specific water hardness and load size.

Detergent tablets and pods can cause foam overload in soft water areas. If you are in a soft water area, consider switching to liquid or powder where the quantity can be adjusted precisely.
Locate and clean the turbidity sensor manually

With the machine unplugged, remove the rear panel by undoing the screws around its edge. The turbidity sensor is a small component mounted in the lower part of the drum area or on the sump hose, connected by a short wiring harness and identifiable by a small clear or translucent optical window on its face. Use a clean damp cloth to gently wipe the sensor window. Do not use abrasive pads or scouring materials.

Only access the sensor with the machine completely unplugged. Ensure all wiring connectors are firmly reattached before replacing the rear panel.
Check the sensor wiring connector

While the rear panel is removed, inspect the electrical connector attached to the turbidity sensor. It should be firmly and fully seated with no corrosion or moisture on the pins. Disconnect the connector and press it firmly back in to ensure a solid contact.

A loose or corroded connector is a common cause of intermittent turbidity sensor faults that clear temporarily after a service wash and then return within a few cycles.
Test the sensor with a multimeter

Disconnect the sensor wiring connector and set a multimeter to resistance. Test across the sensor terminals — refer to the service documentation for your specific Siemens model for the expected resistance value. A completely open circuit reading (OL) across all terminal combinations indicates the sensor has failed and needs replacing.

Only test with the machine unplugged. Do not probe terminals with the machine powered.
Run a test cycle

Reassemble the machine, plug it back in and run a standard 40-degree programme with a small load. The turbidity sensor should allow the programme to proceed and make its automatic rinse adjustments normally.

If E25 clears but returns after 2 to 3 washes, the sensor surface may be too heavily scaled for a service wash to resolve — the sensor unit may need professional cleaning or replacement.
Did this solve your issue?
Escalation

When to call an engineer

  • Turbidity sensor reads open circuit on a multimeter after cleaning and descaling
  • Wiring to the sensor is visibly damaged, pinched, or the connector is corroded
  • Fault returns within 2 to 3 cycles after a full service wash and sensor clean
  • Sensor window is cracked or physically damaged and cannot be cleaned
Common questions

Frequently asked questions

What does the turbidity sensor actually do?
It shines an optical beam through the wash water and measures how much light passes through. The machine uses this to determine whether additional rinse cycles are needed, saving water when the wash is already clean.
Can I use the machine while E25 is showing?
In most cases the machine will complete the cycle but will not be able to optimise rinsing automatically. However, some Siemens models will stop mid-cycle on this fault — check your specific model's documentation.
Will using less detergent fix E25 permanently?
If excess foam is the root cause, yes. If the sensor has become fouled with limescale, a combination of descaling and correct dosing will provide the best long-term result.
How often should I clean the turbidity sensor?
The sensor itself does not need regular manual cleaning if you run a 90-degree service wash monthly and use the correct detergent quantity. In hard water areas, descale every 3 months.

🎯 What is likely causing this fault?

📡
Dirty Sensor (residue, limescale, detergent build up) 60%
📡
Faulty sensor (internal failure) 25%
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Non-return valve Wiring/connectors loose or corroded 10%
📡
Control board error (rare) 5%

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

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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.

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Part Approx. UK Cost Find it
Turbidity Sensor £40 - £50

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.