The Hayward E01 error code is one of the most common service calls a pool technician will face. It means the heater attempted to start its burner and failed to detect a flame within the ignition trial period. Understanding exactly why ignition failed — and working through the causes systematically — is the difference between a 20-minute fix and a return trip.
This guide covers the Hayward H-Series and Universal H-Series (UHS) gas heaters. Both share the same E01 logic, though part numbers differ slightly by model year.
Hayward's control board monitors for a flame signal within a few seconds of activating the gas valve and igniter. If no flame is detected — or the flame signal drops out immediately — the board logs E01 and shuts down the gas valve as a safety measure. After three failed ignition trials, the unit enters hard lockout and must be power-cycled to try again.
Quick tip: Always power-cycle (turn off at the breaker, wait 30 seconds, restore power) before diagnosing. Intermittent E01 after a power event or storm may clear on its own.
The hot surface igniter (HSI) or spark igniter glows to a temperature that ignites the gas. Carbon buildup, physical cracks, or simply age (most igniters last 3–5 seasons) will prevent it from reaching ignition temperature. Inspect visually — a cracked ceramic body is immediate replacement territory. Measure resistance with a multimeter; most Hayward HSIs should read 40–90 ohms when cold.
The flame sensor (also called the flame rod or thermocouple depending on model) detects whether a flame is actually burning. A film of oxidation on the sensor rod is the number-one cause of "igniter lights fine but heater won't stay on" complaints. Clean the rod with fine steel wool or emery cloth — do not use sandpaper. A properly functioning sensor should produce 1–4 microamps DC in flame.
Hayward specifies a minimum incoming gas pressure of 4 inches water column (WC) for natural gas and 11 inches WC for propane. Low pressure means insufficient gas flow to sustain ignition. Check with a manometer — a visual check of the meter tells you nothing useful. Common culprits: undersized supply line, other high-demand appliances running simultaneously, a partially closed manual shutoff.
The gas valve receives a 24V AC signal from the control board. If the valve solenoid is failed or the wiring connector has corroded, the valve won't open and no gas reaches the burners. You'll see the igniter glow with no gas smell and no ignition. Test 24V at the valve terminals during a call for heat; if voltage is present but valve won't open, replace the valve.
This one bites technicians who have recently serviced the unit. The main gas valve and pilot solenoid (on pilot-ignition models) can be swapped accidentally. Double-check your wiring against the schematic on the inside of the heater cabinet door.
Hayward heaters use a pressure switch to verify that the blower is producing adequate draft before allowing ignition. A blocked flue, a failed draft inducer motor, or a cracked pressure switch hose will keep the pressure switch open, preventing the gas valve from energizing. You'll often see this alongside an E05 code, but on some models E01 fires first.
After ruling out all other causes, the control board itself may be misreading the flame sensor signal or failing to fire the igniter circuit. Control board failures are less common but do occur, especially after lightning events. Before condemning a board, verify all 24V outputs with a meter during a call for heat.
Warning: Never bypass the gas valve or flame sensor circuits to "test" ignition. Doing so can allow unburned gas to accumulate, creating a serious explosion hazard.
| Model | E01 Label | Igniter Type | Flame Sensor Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| H-Series (H150–H400) | E01 Ignition Failure | Hot Surface (HSI) | Flame Rod |
| Universal H-Series (UHS) | E01 Ignition Failure | Hot Surface (HSI) | Flame Rod |
| H-Series FD (Forced Draft) | E01 Ignition Failure | Spark + Pilot | Thermocouple |
If you have confirmed adequate gas pressure, cleaned or replaced the flame sensor, inspected the igniter, and verified blower operation — and the heater still throws E01 — the gas valve or control board is the next target. Gas valve replacement requires proper leak testing with soapy solution or a combustible gas detector after installation. If you are not confident in gas work, involve a licensed technician. Gas leaks are not a recoverable service error.
You can look up the Hayward E01 code instantly in PoolLens, which includes a guided diagnostic checklist and links to replacement parts for each model variant.
PoolLens gives you offline access to Hayward, Pentair, Jandy, and Raypak error codes — no signal required. Pull it up at the equipment pad.
Open PoolLens Free →E01 on a Hayward heater means the ignition sequence failed — the control board tried to fire the burner and did not detect a flame. It covers both the H-Series and Universal H-Series (UHS) gas heaters.
Most Hayward gas heaters attempt 3 ignition trials before going to hard lockout. You must power-cycle the unit to reset it after lockout.
Yes. Low gas supply pressure is one of the most common causes of E01. Check incoming pressure with a manometer — Hayward specifies minimum 4 inches WC for natural gas and 11 inches WC for propane.
E01 is an ignition failure code. After three failed attempts the unit enters hard lockout, which some technicians call an ignition lockout. They are related but E01 appears after each failed trial, while lockout is the final state.
Call a licensed pool/gas tech if you have confirmed adequate gas pressure and flow, replaced the igniter, and verified the flame sensor — and the heater still throws E01. At that point the control board or gas valve is the likely culprit.