English Repair Guides Published: Updated: 6 min read

Bosch Dishwasher E24 Error: Drain Fix Before Replacing Parts

A Bosch dishwasher E24 error usually points to drainage. Start with the filter, hose, and sink drain before assuming the pump has failed.

Bosch Dishwasher E24 Error: Drain Fix Before Replacing Parts
Safety note: Disconnect power or water when needed, and do not open electrical or gas appliances unless you are qualified.

Last updated: 2026-06-21

Sources and review for this guide

This article connects the visible symptom to the device or code, then orders safe checks before any internal or risky step.

DeviceBosch dishwasher ModelBosch dishwasher Problemnot draining, standing water, or program stops Error codeE24 / F24

Review method

  1. Match the device type and code or message before interpreting the cause.
  2. Start with safe external checks such as cable, filter, hose, airflow, settings, or one restart.
  3. Stop at electricity, gas, water near power, swollen batteries, painful heat, or internal disassembly.

The expensive mistake is replacing a pump before checking whether the water path is simply blocked. This guide is built around a simple rule: identify the exact device, model, symptom, and risk level before spending money on parts or service.

What this guide covers: This guide explains how to diagnose not draining, standing water, or program stops on Bosch dishwasher in the Bosch dishwasher context, including the visible code or alert E24 / F24, safe first checks, stop conditions, and when support is needed.
Fast answer: Stop the dishwasher safely, clean the filter, check for debris around the drain area, verify the drain hose is not kinked, and test the kitchen sink drain before calling service.

Device, model, and search intent

The target device is Bosch dishwasher, the model context is Bosch dishwasher, and the visible problem is not draining, standing water, or program stops. The code or alert to document is E24 / F24. This matters because generic advice can be wrong when an error code has different meanings across brands or when a phone protects itself from heat or moisture.

Before changing settings, replacing a charger, ordering a pump, or booking service, write down the exact moment the issue appears. Does it happen at startup, while charging, during a drain cycle, after an update, under heat, or after water exposure? That timeline often separates an external condition from an internal failure.

First screen decision: continue, pause, or stop

If there is heat, water, smoke, electrical smell, swelling, a leak, or a repeated safety warning, the right move is to pause. Safe troubleshooting means external checks only: cables, hoses, filters, settings, airflow, and official documentation. It does not mean opening a sealed phone, touching appliance wiring, or bypassing a safety system.

If the device is still usable, gather evidence before resetting anything. Photos of the message, model label, battery screen, or appliance display can save time and prevent a technician from guessing. If the device is not safe to use, disconnect it only when you can do so without touching water or hot parts.

Signals that narrow the cause

  • Water remains at the bottom after the cycle.
  • E24 or F24 appears during or after the drain phase.
  • The filter has food debris, glass, labels, or small hard pieces.
  • The drain hose is bent, pinched, or newly installed.
  • The kitchen sink or garbage disposal drains slowly.

Safe checks in order

  1. Turn the dishwasher off and follow the safety instructions before touching the drain area.
  2. Remove and clean the filter with water and a soft brush.
  3. Inspect the sump area carefully for food pieces, glass, bone, or labels.
  4. Check the drain hose behind or under the cabinet only if access is safe.
  5. Run water through the kitchen sink drain to rule out an external blockage.
  6. If E24 returns after safe checks, record the model number and contact Bosch support or a qualified technician.

How to read the result

A useful test changes only one variable at a time. If you change the charger, location, cable, app, hose, and filter all at once, you may make the problem disappear without learning what fixed it. Repeat the most important test under normal conditions before deciding that the issue is solved.

If the issue appears only with one accessory, room, cycle, load, or cable, the device itself may not be the root cause. If the issue appears across trusted accessories and normal conditions, the chance of a service-level fault rises. That is when your notes, photos, and official-source checks become valuable.

Quick decision table

What you seeWhat it may suggestBest next step
The issue appears only in one conditionExternal cause is possibleChange one factor and test again
The issue returns after safe checksA part or sensor may need diagnosisStop repeated attempts and document results
Heat, water, burning smell, or battery swelling appearsSafety riskDisconnect safely and seek qualified service

Common mistakes that make this worse

Most expensive repair mistakes start with impatience: forcing a device to keep running, assuming one error code means the same thing on every model, or replacing parts without a documented reason.

  • Pouring harsh drain chemicals into the dishwasher.
  • Putting your hand near the pump area without switching the appliance off and checking for sharp glass.
  • Replacing the drain pump before cleaning the filter and hose path.
  • Ignoring the sink drain, disposal plug, or recent installation work.
  • Running repeated cycles while water is standing inside.

When home troubleshooting is not enough

Stop when the next step requires opening the device, measuring live electricity, handling a battery, touching water near power, moving a heavy appliance in an unsafe way, or bypassing a warning. A good repair decision is not only about cost; it is about avoiding damage, leaks, data loss, and personal risk.

When you contact support or a technician, ask them to connect the proposed repair to the exact symptom and model. A professional answer should explain why a part is likely faulty, what was ruled out, and what warranty applies after the repair.

Prepare this before contacting support

  • Photo of the displayed E24 or F24 code.
  • Bosch E-Nr or exact model number from the label.
  • Whether water remains at the bottom.
  • When the filter was last cleaned.
  • Whether the sink drain works normally.

Prevention checklist

  • Scrape large food remains before loading dishes.
  • Clean the filter on a schedule based on use.
  • Keep labels, toothpicks, glass, and bones out of the dishwasher.
  • Check the drain hose after installation or moving the appliance.
  • Use a suitable dishwasher cleaning cycle periodically.

Related guides

Sources and references

This article uses manufacturer support pages and treats model-specific instructions as higher priority than generic forum answers.

FAQ

What does E24 mean on a Bosch dishwasher?

It usually points to a drain problem or restriction in the water path, so the first checks are the filter, drain area, hose, and sink drain.

Does E24 always mean the drain pump is bad?

No. A clogged filter, bent hose, sink blockage, or installation issue can cause the same symptom.

Can I use drain cleaner for E24?

Do not use harsh drain chemicals inside the dishwasher. Follow Bosch cleaning steps and stop if the next check requires internal electrical access.

Safety note: This guide is for safe external diagnosis. Any internal inspection involving electricity, gas, batteries, sealed parts, or water near power should be handled by a qualified professional.

Prepared and reviewed by

SMSM Hub Editorial Team

The SMSM Hub editorial team reviews repair, phone, and internet guides with a method focused on safe external checks, clear steps, and knowing when a qualified technician is needed.

About the editorial team Safety and review method

Content review and safety

  • Last updated: 2026-06-21.
  • Category: English Repair Guides.
  • This guide focuses on safe external checks and does not encourage opening appliances or working with electricity, gas, or batteries.
  • If you spot information that needs correction, contact us from the contact page.

Read our editorial and review policy

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