i11
AEG Dishwasher
Urgency
✓ Low
Easy to resolve
Repair difficulty
✓ DIY Friendly
No specialist needed
Diagnosis

What this error means

Your dishwasher is taking too long to fill with water and has stopped as a safety measure.

The i11 error code means your AEG dishwasher started a fill cycle but the water did not reach the required level within the expected time — typically around 10 minutes. This is different from the i10 error, which triggers immediately when no water enters at all. The i11 allows the fill to begin but times out when progress is too slow, pointing to a partial restriction rather than a complete blockage. Common causes include a kinked or partially closed inlet hose, low mains water pressure, a clogged inlet filter, or a faulty water inlet valve that opens but cannot flow freely. The machine has stopped to prevent damage and will not restart until the fault is cleared.

⚠️
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
5–15 minutes
🔧
Difficulty
Anyone
🏠
Appliance
Dishwasher

What you'll need first

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Step-by-step

1
Check your water supply is on
Make sure the tap or stopcock that supplies your dishwasher has not been accidentally turned off or is only partially open. It should be fully open (turned anticlockwise as far as it will go).
2
Check the inlet hose for kinks
Pull the dishwasher forward slightly and look at the rubber hose running from the back of the machine to the wall. If it is bent, twisted or squashed against the wall, straighten it out carefully.
3
Check other taps in the house
Run a cold tap nearby. If the flow is unusually weak, your mains water pressure may be temporarily low. Wait 10–15 minutes and try again.
4
Reset the dishwasher
Once you have checked the above, turn the dishwasher off at the plug, wait 30 seconds, then turn it back on and start a new cycle to see if the error clears.
Diagnostic

Symptoms to look for

  1. Dishwasher stops shortly after starting a cycle
  2. i11 error code displayed on the control panel
  3. Machine appears to start but then beeps and stops
  4. Cycle takes much longer than usual before displaying an error
  5. You can hear the machine attempting to fill but progress is very slow
  6. Error appears more often when other appliances are using water simultaneously
  7. Machine was working fine then stopped after a period of non-use
Step-by-step repair guide

Diagnostic steps

Time 20–45 minutes
Skill Anyone
Understand the difference between i10 and i11

Before you start, it helps to know which fault you are actually dealing with. The i10 code fires immediately at the start of a cycle when the dishwasher detects no water entering whatsoever — the inlet valve may not be opening at all, or the water supply is completely off. The i11 code is different: water does begin to enter, but the fill is so slow that the machine times out before reaching the correct level. This distinction matters because i11 almost always points to a partial restriction somewhere in the water supply path rather than a complete failure. If you are seeing i11, work through the steps below in order.

Turn off the dishwasher and isolate the water supply

Press the power button to turn the dishwasher off. Locate the isolator valve on the inlet hose under your sink or behind the machine — it is a small inline tap on the hose itself. Turn it clockwise until it stops to shut off the water. If you cannot find an isolator valve, turn off the stopcock under your sink instead. This makes it safe to disconnect hoses and inspect parts without water spraying out.

Inspect and clean the inlet hose filter

With the water supply off, unscrew the inlet hose from the back of the dishwasher by turning the connector anticlockwise. Have a small towel ready as some residual water will drip out. Look into the end of the hose connector — you will see a small mesh filter screen inside. This screen catches debris from the water supply and can become blocked over time, especially in hard water areas. Use a flat-head screwdriver or a pair of tweezers to carefully pull the mesh screen out. Rinse it under a running cold tap and use an old toothbrush to remove any lime scale or sediment. If the screen is damaged or corroded, replace it (a new screen costs around £2–5 and is available from any appliance parts supplier). Reinsert the clean screen firmly before reattaching the hose.

Hold the screen up to the light after cleaning — you should be able to see light through the mesh clearly. If not, soak it in white vinegar for 30 minutes and rinse again.
Check the inlet hose for kinks and damage

Reconnect the inlet hose finger-tight, then pull the dishwasher away from the unit carefully — most slide straight out. Run your hand along the full length of the inlet hose from the machine to the wall connection. Feel for any sharp bends, kinks, or areas where the hose has been pinched against a cabinet wall or the machine itself. Straighten any kinks gently. If the hose has a permanent crease or crack, it will need replacing — a standard dishwasher inlet hose costs £8–15 and is a straightforward swap. Also check the hose is not longer than necessary; excess hose coiled behind the machine is a common cause of kinking.

Reposition the hose so it has a smooth gentle curve from wall to machine with no tight bends.
Test the mains water pressure

Restore the water supply and place a jug or bucket under your kitchen tap. Run the cold tap fully open and time how long it takes to fill one litre (most jugs are marked). A healthy supply should fill one litre in under 6 seconds. If it takes longer, your mains pressure is likely too low for the dishwasher to fill within its timeout window. Low pressure can be caused by a partially closed stopcock, high demand on the local supply, or a problem with your incoming mains. Check your main stopcock (usually under the sink or where the supply enters the house) is fully open. If pressure remains low with it fully open, contact your water supplier.

Inspect the water inlet valve

If the hose, filter and pressure all check out, the water inlet valve itself may be partially faulty. This is a small electrically operated solenoid valve mounted at the back of the dishwasher where the inlet hose connects to the machine. With the dishwasher unplugged and the water supply off, remove the back panel (usually held by 4–6 screws around the edge). Locate the inlet valve — it is the component where the hose attaches, with one or two wire connectors plugged into it. Inspect the valve for any visible cracks, corrosion, or lime scale build-up around the inlet port. Disconnect the wire connectors and use a multimeter set to the resistance (Ω) setting — place a probe on each terminal of the valve. A healthy inlet valve reads between 200–500 ohms. A reading of zero (short circuit) or infinite resistance (open circuit) confirms the valve has failed and needs replacing.

Replace the water inlet valve if faulty

A replacement AEG dishwasher inlet valve costs £20–£45 depending on your specific model. Before ordering, locate your model number — it is printed on a label inside the door on the left-hand side when you open it. To fit the new valve: with the machine unplugged and water off, disconnect the hose and wire connectors from the old valve, remove the 2–3 screws holding it in place, and fit the new valve in reverse order. Make sure the hose connector is hand-tight plus a quarter turn — over-tightening can crack the plastic fitting. Restore the water supply slowly and check for leaks before pushing the machine back into position and running a test cycle.

Take a photo of the wire connector positions before removing them so you can reconnect them correctly.
Reset and test

Once you have completed whichever steps applied to your situation, plug the dishwasher back in, restore the water supply fully, and run a short cycle such as a rinse-only or quick wash programme. Stay nearby for the first 5 minutes and watch for any leaks around the hose connections. If the i11 code does not return and the machine fills normally, the fault is resolved. If the error returns immediately, the inlet valve is most likely the cause and should be replaced. If the machine fills but very slowly even after all the above steps, call a qualified engineer as the fault may be with the pressure sensor or control board.

Did this solve your issue?
Escalation

When to call an engineer

  • Error i11 persists after cleaning the inlet filter and checking the hose
  • Inlet valve tests out of range on a multimeter (not 200–500 ohms)
  • Mains water pressure is adequate but machine still times out on fill
  • Error returns immediately after every reset with no obvious cause
  • You are not comfortable removing the back panel or working near electrical components
  • Visible water damage, corrosion or burn marks around the inlet valve or control board
Common questions

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between the AEG i10 and i11 error codes?
The i10 code means no water entered the dishwasher at all at the start of the cycle — the machine detected a complete absence of flow. The i11 code means water did start to enter, but the fill was so slow the machine timed out before reaching the correct level. In short: i10 is no water, i11 is not enough water fast enough. They share some causes (closed tap, blocked filter) but i11 more specifically points to low pressure or a partial restriction rather than a total blockage.
Can I fix the AEG i11 error myself?
Yes, in most cases. The most common causes — a closed isolator valve, a kinked hose, or a blocked inlet filter screen — are all straightforward to check and fix yourself with no specialist tools. If the fault turns out to be a failed inlet valve, replacing it is a manageable DIY job if you are comfortable with basic appliance repairs. If you are unsure at any stage, or if the fault persists after trying all the steps, call a qualified engineer.
How do I reset the i11 error on my AEG dishwasher?
Turn the dishwasher off at the power button, wait 30 seconds, then switch it back on. This clears the displayed error. However, the error will return immediately if the underlying cause has not been fixed — the reset only clears the display, it does not fix the fault. Always resolve the cause first, then reset.
Could low water pressure cause the i11 error?
Yes. AEG dishwashers require a minimum dynamic water pressure of around 0.5 bar to fill within the allowed time window. If your mains pressure is temporarily low — for example during peak demand in your area — the machine can time out and display i11 even if the hose and filter are perfectly clear. Check by running a cold tap at full flow and timing how long it takes to fill a one-litre jug. It should take 6 seconds or less for adequate pressure.
How much does it cost to fix the AEG i11 error?
If the fix is a blocked inlet filter screen, it costs nothing — just a clean under the tap. A replacement inlet hose costs £8–15 if yours is kinked or cracked. A new water inlet valve costs £20–45 for the part, plus your time if fitting it yourself, or £80–150 including a call-out if you use an engineer.
Where is the inlet filter on my AEG dishwasher?
The inlet filter is a small mesh screen located inside the hose connector at the point where the inlet hose attaches to the back of the dishwasher. To access it, turn off the water supply, unscrew the hose connector from the machine, and look inside the fitting — you will see a small circular mesh screen that can be pulled out for cleaning.
Is the i11 error dangerous?
No. The i11 code is a safety timeout — the machine has stopped itself to prevent running a cycle without enough water, which could damage the pump and heating element. There is no immediate safety risk to you or your home. The machine will simply not operate until the fault is resolved.

🎯 What is most likely causing your AEG i11 error?

💧
Blocked or restricted inlet filter screen 40%
🔩
Kinked, pinched or partially closed inlet hose 25%
🔌
Low mains water pressure 15%
⚙️
Faulty or partially seized water inlet valve 12%
🔹
Closed or partially open isolator valve or stopcock 8%

⚠️ 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
AEG Water inlet valve £25 - £40
AEG Water inlet valve £20 - £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.