When a Bosch dishwasher flashes and won’t run, check the door latch, control lock, delay start, water supply, then reset the machine.
If the control lights flash and the wash never begins, the machine is trying to tell you something. The good news: most causes are simple—mis-latched door, a lock on the controls, a delayed cycle, low water supply, or a stuck program. This step-by-step guide walks you through quick checks first, then deeper fixes. You’ll also see when to call a pro.
Quick Wins Before You Grab Tools
Start with the basics. These take seconds and often clear the blinking with no parts needed.
| Symptom | Likely Cause | What To Do |
|---|---|---|
| Lights flash, no wash | Door not latched | Open/close firmly; listen for a solid click; remove items blocking the seal |
| All buttons unresponsive | Control lock (child lock) | Hold the lock key combo for ~4 seconds to clear “CL” or the lock symbol |
| Countdown on display | Delay start set | Cancel the delay; start a normal cycle |
| Tap icon or “Check water” | Low or blocked supply | Open the supply valve; unkink hose; clean inlet filter |
| Flashing after a power blip | Stuck program | Run a proper reset; restart the cycle |
Why A Bosch Won’t Run And Only Flashes
Control lights blink when the controller sees a condition that prevents a safe start. The machine pauses, flashes an indicator, and waits for you to correct the issue. Here’s how to track it down fast.
Door Latch Or Strike Out Of Alignment
A mis-latched door reads as “open,” so the motor never kicks in. Even a fork handle or tall pan can nudge the door just enough to break contact. Pull the bottom rack out and look along the seal for obstructions. Check that the latch engages the strike with a firm click. If you need to push the door to make the lights stop blinking, the latch may be worn or the door might be flexing against a crowded rack.
Fix: Re-load bulky items so they don’t press the door. If the latch feels loose or inconsistent, replacement is the lasting cure.
Control Lock Is On
Many models ship with a panel lock that blocks button presses. With the lock on, you can power the unit but not start a wash. Look for “CL” or a small padlock symbol on the display.
Fix: Hold the lock key or the labeled combo for about four seconds to clear it. The panel will beep and accept inputs again.
Delay Start Is Active
A delayed cycle makes the machine sit idle while a light blinks. You might see a countdown timer.
Fix: Cancel the delay (often by holding the Start/Reset key for several seconds) and start a normal program. If you use delays often, set them at the end of loading so you don’t forget they’re armed.
Program Hung After An Interruption
A brief outage or a door opened mid-cycle can leave the controller mid-step. The drain pump may run, lights blink, and nothing else happens.
Fix: Perform a full reset. On many models you press and hold the Start or Reset area for about four seconds until draining starts, wait a minute for the pump to stop, then power the unit off and on. If the panel still blinks, repeat once and try a short program.
Need an official walkthrough? Bosch documents the exact reset steps here: reset the dishwasher.
Water Supply Issues: The “Tap” Icon And Slow Fill
When the machine can’t get enough water, it stalls and flashes. Many models show a tap symbol or a “check water” message.
Supply Valve Closed Or Partly Shut
Under-sink valves get nudged during cleaning and sit half-open. That starves the inlet and triggers warnings.
Fix: Open the valve fully. If you use a saddle valve or a fragile handle, turn it gently to avoid damage.
Inlet Hose Kinked Or Frozen Debris In The Screen
Slide the unit forward and inspect the hose. A sharp bend near the cabinet hole is common. At the machine end, a tiny mesh screen protects the valve and can clog with grit.
Fix: Straighten the run and clean the screen with a soft brush. If the hose looks brittle, replace it.
Reading The Tap Symbol
Bosch explains that the tap icon points to water-supply trouble and gives three simple checks you can do at home. See the official guide: water tap error in the display.
Leak Protection Triggered (E15 Range)
Some models stop all washing and flash while a leak tray switch stays wet. You may hear the drain pump run on and off. If the display shows E15, the base pan has moisture and the machine locks out to avoid flooding.
What Causes It
Loose hose clamps, a nicked door gasket, a cracked sump, or a spill during moving can drip into the base. Even a foamy load can splash where it shouldn’t.
Fix: Pull the unit forward, tip it slightly (with towels ready) to see if water exits the base, and let the tray dry. Track down the source before the next run—check the inlet hose, circulation area, and door seal. If the switch keeps triggering, schedule a repair visit.
Power, Breaker, And Junction Box Checks
If the panel blinks and then goes dead, or if lights strobe without response, power delivery can be flaky.
Breaker Trips Or Loose Feed
A shared circuit or a loose wirenut at the junction box under the unit can cause dropouts. Newer installations use a plug; older ones often hardwire.
Fix: Cycle the dedicated breaker off and on. If the machine is hardwired, disconnect power at the breaker before inspecting the junction box cover for heat damage or loose connections. If you see darkened insulation, call an electrician.
Control Panel And Sensors
When basics check out, look at the inputs the controller uses to decide whether to start.
Door Switch Micro-Contacts
Even with a solid click, worn contacts can bounce and signal “open.” The effect is a blinking panel and no wash.
Fix: Replace the latch assembly if the switch tests erratic. It’s a common, straightforward repair on many models.
Float System Stuck High
The float keeps the tub from overfilling. If debris holds it up, the inlet valve never opens and the controller throws a warning.
Fix: Remove the bottom rack, find the float dome, and make sure it moves freely. Clean around the sump and filters.
Touch Panel Inputs Not Registering
Moisture behind the fascia or a failing keypad can cause random blinking and blocked starts.
Fix: Power off at the breaker for five minutes to discharge the board. If inputs still miss or ghost-press, the panel or main board may need service.
Bosch Dishwasher Not Starting, Lights Flashing — Step-By-Step Fix Plan
Work top-down and test after each step. Most users solve it within the first few steps.
- Open and re-close the door with a firm push; remove tall items near the seal.
- Clear the control lock (hold the lock key or combo for ~4 seconds).
- Cancel delay start; start a normal cycle.
- Run a proper reset (hold Start/Reset ~4 seconds until drain runs; power off/on).
- Open the water valve fully; straighten the inlet hose; clean the inlet screen.
- Check the float for free movement; clean filters and the sump area.
- Look for the tap icon or any code; address the hint given on the display.
- If E15 shows or the drain pump cycles with no wash, dry the base pan and find the leak.
- Inspect the door latch; replace if the click feels weak or the switch tests bad.
- Check the breaker and, if hardwired, the junction box for loose connections.
Reading Lights, Icons, And Beeps
Different signals point to different blocks. Use this cheat sheet while you test.
| Indicator | What It’s Saying | Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| Padlock / “CL” | Panel locked | Hold lock keys ~4s to clear |
| Tap symbol | Water supply issue | Open valve; hose straight; clean screen |
| E15 | Water in base pan | Dry leak tray; find and fix source |
| Countdown timer | Delay start enabled | Cancel delay; start cycle now |
| Beep + drain only | Reset/cancel in progress | Wait 60–90s; then power off/on |
Care Moves That Prevent Flash-And-No-Start Moments
Small habits keep sensors happy and programs smooth.
- Load smart: Keep tall sheet pans and pot handles clear of the door frame.
- Rinse the filters weekly: Food bits around the sump can jam the float.
- Keep the hose straight: A clean path to the valve avoids tap warnings.
- Run a hot-water prime: Let the sink run hot for 30 seconds before starting a cycle to help filling and spray.
- Use the right detergent dose: Excess suds can toss water where it doesn’t belong.
When To Call A Technician
Book a visit if any of these apply:
- Repeated door-latch failures or a door that won’t stay shut
- Tap icon returns even with strong flow and a clean screen
- E15 shows again after drying the base and tightening hose clamps
- Touch panel misfires or dead zones after a full power reset
- Evidence of heat damage or melted insulation in the junction box
A trained tech can test the inlet valve, door switch, leak sensor, and control board under load. That shortens guesswork and saves time.
Model Differences And Where To Find Exact Steps
Panel labels and key combos vary by series. Some put the lock on a dedicated key, others use a two-button combo. Reset wording can read “Start,” “Reset 4 sec,” or show only icons. If your panel looks different, grab the model number from the door edge and check the brand’s service pages for model-specific instructions and parts diagrams.
Wrap-Up: A Simple Order That Solves Most Cases
Work in this order: latch, lock, delay, reset, water, float, leaks, power. Most flashing-no-start problems clear by step four or five. If a code appears, follow the hint it gives you, then retry a short cycle. When in doubt, use the official reset steps and the tap-icon guide linked above. They match how the controller expects you to recover.
