When spa jets refuse to start, check power, water level, filters, and air in the lines before calling a pro.
Your soak is set, the water feels right, and then nothing—no surge, no push, no massage. The good news: most jet outages come from simple issues you can handle at home. This guide walks through clear checks that restore flow, protect equipment, and keep the tub safe to run.
Hot Tub Jets Not Turning On — Quick Checks
Start with the basics. Power interruptions, a tripped safety device, or a low water line can silence the pump. Mechanical snags like clogged filters or an air lock can do the same. Run through these steps in order; you’ll either fix the problem or narrow it down for a technician.
One-Screen Troubleshooter
| Symptom | Likely Cause | What To Try |
|---|---|---|
| Nothing happens when you press Jets | GFCI/breaker tripped; panel lock; blown fuse | Reset GFCI, flip breaker fully off/on, clear panel lock, replace fuse only to spec |
| Pump runs but no pressure | Air in plumbing; low water; gate valve closed | Bleed air, top up water to just above filters, open valves |
| Weak, sputtering flow | Dirty filters; suction blockage; diverter set wrong | Rinse or swap filters, clear intakes, center the diverter |
| Jets shut off after a minute | Thermal overload; clogged filter; closed vents | Let pump cool, clean filters, open air controls |
| Only some seats work | Air/water diverter position; individual jets closed | Rotate diverter; twist jet nozzles open; remove calcium build-up |
| Panel shows error code | Flow/pressure switch open; sensor fault | Clean filters, verify pumps prime; check for kinks; note code for service |
Safety First Before You Test Anything
Water and electricity demand care. Turn off power at the disconnect before pulling filters, opening the equipment bay, or reaching near a motor. A working ground-fault device is non-negotiable. For general electrical safety around spas, review the NFPA safety tips. Keep users out of the water while you diagnose.
Step 1: Restore Power And Clear Lockouts
Reset The GFCI Or Breaker
Most tubs sit on a dedicated circuit with a ground-fault device. If the button on the outdoor GFCI has popped or the spa breaker sits midway, press reset or switch fully off, then on. If it trips again at once, stop and call an electrician—there’s a fault that needs skilled eyes.
Wake The Control Panel
Some topsides have a child lock or a clean cycle that pauses pump control for several minutes. Unlock the keypad, wait out any cleaning countdown, and pick Standard mode if your panel offers mode choices. Sleep or Eco settings can delay pump starts on some models.
Confirm The Water Line
Low water lets air into plumbing and starves the pump. Fill to the mark just over the skimmer or filter inlets. If the tub was drained recently, go straight to the air-lock step below.
Step 2: Clear Air And Restore Prime
Bleed Air From The Pump
After a drain/refill, the wet end can trap air so the impeller spins without moving water. Loosen the small bleed screw on the pump face a half turn until water seeps, then tighten. If your pump lacks a bleed, swap the jets button off, wait a few seconds, then on again a few times to burp the lines.
Purge Stubborn Air Locks
If the pump still whirs without flow, pull the filter, hold a hose in the filter well, and run water into the suction while the jets cycle. This forces water through the intake and pushes bubbles out to the seats. When the stream firms up, reinstall the filter and retest.
Step 3: Fix Low Flow From Filters And Valves
Clean Or Swap The Cartridge
A loaded filter chokes the circulation path and opens the flow switch, which prevents the jet pump from starting or keeps it from staying on. Rinse pleats top to bottom with a hose. If the cartridge is past its service life, replace it; spare sets save the day on party night.
Check Suction Covers And Valves
Look for leaves, hair, or scale at the footwell suctions. Make sure every slice or gate valve near the pump is fully raised. A half-closed valve will starve the impeller and create noise, heat, and early wear.
Step 4: Set Air And Diverters For Real Pressure
Open Air Controls
Those small knobs near each seat set the mix of air with water. Spin them open for more punch. If you hear a hiss but see no boost, pull the knob and check the small tubing for kinks.
Center The Water Diverter
The top-side diverter sends flow to one bank of seats or splits it across the shell. For balanced flow, point the handle to the center mark. If one bank still dies, you may have a stuck check valve or scaled lines.
Step 5: Rule Out Sensor And Switch Problems
Flow Or Pressure Switch Open
Most packs monitor movement before allowing heat and sometimes before enabling the jet pump. A dirty filter, air in the lines, or a weak circulation pump can keep the switch open. Clear those basics. If the message persists, the switch or its wiring may need replacement.
High-Limit Tripped
If the heater ran dry during an air lock, the high-limit sensor can trip and block jets. Let the system cool, restore prime, and reset power. If the trip returns, book service.
Step 6: When The Pump Itself Is The Problem
Listen For Clues
A quiet hum with no spin points to a seized shaft or failed start capacitor. A loud grind suggests worn bearings. A click and silence hints at a relay fault on the control board. If basic resets don’t change the sound, the motor or pack may need repair.
Thermal Overload
Running with clogged filters or shut valves can overheat the motor. Many pump motors stop to protect windings, then restart after cooling. Fix the flow restriction so it doesn’t repeat.
Water Care That Keeps Jets Happy
Clean, balanced water protects every piece that touches it. Scale narrows jet orifices; oils gum up filters; low sanitizer grows slime that coats lines. Keep sanitizer and pH in range and you’ll prevent many “no-jet” calls. For household tubs, the CDC guidance on home water treatment and testing lists baseline levels and habits that keep water clear and gear protected.
Jet Care, Parts, And Settings
Open And Clean Individual Nozzles
Many nozzles twist to shut. If one seat is dead, turn each face ring a quarter turn to open. For scale, soak removable parts in a mild descaler, rinse, and reinstall with matching tabs lined up.
Check Timers And Modes
Some control packs let you set filtration windows and jet timeouts. A short timeout can stop massage before you settle in. Extend the minutes for the Jets button if your panel offers that choice.
Diverter Health And Check Valves
Rubber parts age. If the handle feels gritty or won’t center, the internal gate may be worn. If air controls gurgle but add no punch, a failed check valve can route air the wrong way. These are quick parts once you have access to the plumbing.
Care Schedule That Prevents “No-Flow” Surprises
A simple rhythm stops most outages. Rotate two filter sets monthly, deep-clean once per quarter, and swap cartridges every year or as your maker suggests. Flush pipes with a purge product before each drain/refill. Keep the cover in good shape so leaves and grit stay out.
Maintenance Planner
| Task | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rinse filters | Every 2–4 weeks | Swap in a clean dry set for best flow |
| Deep-clean filters | Every 3 months | Soak in filter cleaner; rinse well |
| Drain and refill | Every 3–4 months | Purge lines before refill |
| Inspect pump bay | Every month | Look for leaks, heat marks, or noise |
| Test sanitizer & pH | 2–3 times per week | Match your sanitizer system |
| Replace cartridges | 12 months | Sooner with heavy use or oils |
When To Call A Technician
Stop DIY and book service if the breaker trips again after reset, if you smell hot wiring, or if error codes return after basic steps. Water near live gear is risky. A pro can check amperage draw, test the capacitor, confirm switch operation, and inspect the control board safely.
Parts And Tools You’ll Want On Hand
Handy Spares
Keep a second filter set, a spare fuse matched to your pack, a few O-rings, and fresh gaskets for unions you open often. Add new jet inserts if yours show wear or scale scars that won’t scrub off.
Basic Tools
A hose with a spray nozzle, a soft brush, nitrile gloves, a filter canister for soaking, a non-contact voltage tester, and a flashlight will carry you through most checks. A multimeter helps diagnose motors and switches if you’re trained to use one.
Quick Reference: What Stops Flow
Run through this short list anytime massage goes quiet:
- Power lost or safety device tripped.
- Water line below the skimmer or filters.
- Air in the wet end after a drain/refill.
- Dirty or failing filters.
- Diverters or air controls set closed.
- Flow switch open or sensor trip.
- Pump motor overheating or failing.
Keep Soaks Smooth
With a checklist and spares, you can solve most “no-jet” moments. When power protection trips or leaks show up, pause and bring in a tech. The goal is clear: safe power, clear water, steady pressure each time you press that button.
