HP printer E4 can keep showing Paper Jam even when you cannot see a full sheet. The cause may be a tiny scrap, skewed paper, a roller issue, or a sensor still seeing an obstruction. This guide is built around a simple rule: identify the exact device, model, symptom, and risk level before spending money on parts or service.
Device, model, and search intent
The target device is HP DeskJet, ENVY, or Smart Tank printer, the model context is HP printers that show E4 or Paper Jam on the control panel, and the visible problem is The printer reports E4 or Paper Jam, paper will not feed, or the error remains after removing visible paper. The code or alert to document is E4 / Paper Jam. 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
- The control panel shows E4 or a Paper Jam light.
- The printer pulls paper crookedly or stops immediately.
- No full sheet is visible, but the error remains.
- The problem started after damp, curled, or overloaded paper.
- The carriage or rollers make noise and then stop.
Safe checks in order
- Press Cancel once if HP instructions for your model support automatic jam clearing.
- Turn the printer off and unplug the power cord before reaching into the paper path.
- Remove paper from the input tray and inspect the tray, output path, cartridge area, and rear or bottom access if present.
- Pull jammed paper in the normal paper path direction and avoid tearing it.
- Look for small scraps, labels, clips, or packaging fragments.
- Clean the pickup rollers with a slightly damp lint-free cloth, then let them dry.
- Reload a small stack of dry plain paper and print a single test page.
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 see | What it may suggest | Best next step |
|---|---|---|
| The issue appears only in one condition | External cause is possible | Change one factor and test again |
| The issue returns after safe checks | A part or sensor may need diagnosis | Stop repeated attempts and document results |
| Heat, water, burning smell, or battery swelling appears | Safety risk | Disconnect 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.
- Pulling paper backward and leaving torn scraps inside.
- Using wet, curled, mixed-size, or overloaded paper.
- Forcing the carriage by hand while the printer is powered.
- Using metal tools inside the paper path.
- Resetting repeatedly without checking rollers and hidden access areas.
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
- Exact HP printer model
- Whether the code is E4 or a Paper Jam message
- Whether paper moves at all
- Photos of any accessible paper path areas
- Whether rollers were cleaned and one-sheet test was tried
Prevention checklist
- Use dry, flat paper within the supported size range.
- Do not overload the tray or mix paper sizes.
- Fan paper lightly before loading.
- Keep labels and damaged sheets out of the printer.
- Clean rollers when paper feed becomes skewed.
Related guides
- Arabic HP E4 paper jam guide
- HP printer offline guide
- Canon printer 5B00 guide
- Printer troubleshooting hub
Sources and references
This article uses manufacturer support pages and treats model-specific instructions as higher priority than generic forum answers.
- HP Support: DeskJet ENVY 6000 6400 E4 paper jam
- HP Support: Smart Tank E4 paper jam
- HP Support: DeskJet ENVY blinking lights and error codes
FAQ
What does E4 mean on an HP printer?
On many HP DeskJet, ENVY, and Smart Tank models, E4 indicates a paper jam or paper path obstruction.
Why does HP E4 show with no paper visible?
A small torn scrap, skewed sheet, dirty roller, foreign object, or paper path sensor can keep the error active.
Should I force the carriage to move?
No. Unplug the printer first and avoid forcing internal parts. If the carriage will not move freely, stop and contact support.
