standing water in washing machine
Liberty Home Guard

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Ellie Brooks

Written By Ellie Brooks

Published 04/24/26
Home Maintenance

Why Is There Standing Water in My Washing Machine?

Key Takeaways:

  • The most common reason there is standing water in a washing machine is a clogged drain filter or a kinked/blocked drain hose. Both are easy DIY fixes.
  • Smart washers (2023–2026 models) display specific error codes like F21, 5E, or E85 that point directly to the drainage failure type.
  • faulty drain pumpfailed lid/door sensor, or home plumbing issue can also leave water sitting in the drum after a cycle.
  • Preventive habits such as cleaning filters every 3 months, emptying pockets, and using HE detergent dramatically reduce your risk of drainage problems.
  • According to a 2024 analysis of washing machine reliability, approximately 15% of machines require a repair within the first year, with drainage failures among the leading causes.

Opening your washer after a cycle to find a drum full of water is one of the more frustrating appliance surprises a homeowner can face. But before you call a repair technician, know this: most washing machine drainage problems have more than one cause that don’t require professional help.

This guide walks you through every likely reason why there is standing water in your washing machine, how to diagnose each one, how to remove the water safely, and, crucially, how to stop the problem from coming back.

Quick warranty note: If your machine is still under a manufacturer’s warranty, check the terms before opening anything up. DIY repairs can void coverage. When in doubt, contact the manufacturer first.

 

 

The 6 Most Common Causes of Standing Water in a Washing Machine

1. Clogged Drain Filter

The single most common reason water sits in the drum is a blocked drain filter. Most modern washers, especially front-loaders, have a small filter near the bottom of the machine that traps lint, hair, coins, and fabric debris. Manufacturers typically recommend cleaning it every three to four months, but many homeowners go years without touching it.

Where to find it: Front-loading machines usually have a small access panel near the bottom front. Top-loaders may have the filter under the central agitator or along the rim of the drum. When in doubt, check your model’s manual.

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Signs your filter is clogged:

  • Slow drainage or water left in drum
  • Error codes on digital displays (Samsung 5E/5C, Kenmore/Whirlpool F21, GE E8)
  • Musty odors from the drum
  • Extended cycle times
  • Excessively wet clothes after the spin cycle

How to clean it:

  1. Place towels and a shallow pan beneath the filter panel.
  2. Slowly open the filter cap counterclockwise on most models; water will drain out.
  3. Remove debris: lint, coins, hair ties, and small clothing items are all common finds.
  4. Inspect the filter for cracks or damage. Replace if necessary.
  5. Reinstall snugly to prevent leaks.

Real-world example: The Samsung 5E/5C error code, one of the most-searched washer error codes in 2025, is triggered almost exclusively by a clogged filter or kinked drain hose. Clearing the filter resolves the majority of these cases without any professional service.

 

2. Blocked or Kinked Drain Hose

Your washer expels wastewater through a corrugated drain hose connected to a wall standpipe. If this hose gets kinked, crushed, or internally clogged, water has nowhere to go, and it pools in the drum.

Common culprits inside a clogged hose: lint balls, accumulated detergent residue, clumps of hair, and occasionally small items like a forgotten sock or a baby’s shoe.

How to check and clear it:

  1. Unplug the machine and pull it away from the wall.
  2. Visually inspect the hose for tight bends or kinks. This is especially common after moving the machine.
  3. Disconnect the hose from the wall standpipe and place the free end in a bucket lower than the washer; gravity should drain remaining water.
  4. If water doesn’t flow freely, run a plumber’s snake through the hose to break up the clog.
  5. Flush with clean water before reconnecting.
  6. Reattach without kinking, and push the machine back into place carefully.

2026 note: High-capacity front-loaders introduced widely after 2022 produce significantly more wastewater per cycle. If your standpipe was installed for an older, smaller machine, it may be undersized, causing backed-up water that mimics a machine drainage fault.

 

3. Faulty Drain Pump

If the hose is clear and water still won’t drain, the problem is likely the drain pump. The pump actively forces water upward through the drain hose. Without it working properly, the water just sits.

Signs of a failing drain pump:

  • Humming, buzzing, or grinding noises during the drain cycle
  • Washing machine leaking from the machine’s bottom
  • The washer stopping mid-cycle with standing water
  • GE’s E85 error code indicating zero flow detected
  • A burning smell during operation

How to diagnose and address it:

  1. Unplug the machine and access the pump via the rear panel. Instructions vary by model, so consult your manual.
  2. Check for physical obstructions in the pump. Coins, hair, and small garments are frequent blockers.
  3. Spin the impeller manually to check for resistance.
  4. If unobstructed but non-functional, the pump likely needs replacement. Replacement pumps are widely available online for $20–$80 depending on the brand, and most are straightforward to swap.

New example: GE’s SmartHQ-connected washers can display real-time diagnostic data through their app, helping distinguish between low-flow issues and pump motor failures.

 

4. Failed Lid Switch or Door Sensor

Many washing machines, particularly older top-loaders, use a lid switch sensor to confirm the lid is closed before initiating the spin or drain cycle. If this sensor malfunctions, the machine may refuse to drain because it thinks the lid is still open.

Front-loading machines use a door latch sensor with similar logic. A failed sensor leaves water sitting in the drum at the end of what appears to be a complete cycle.

How to test the lid switch:

  1. Start a cycle and leave the lid open.
  2. Manually press the lid switch with your finger.
  3. If the machine doesn’t respond, the sensor may be faulty.
  4. Confirm with a multimeter by checking for electrical continuity when pressed.
  5. Replacement switches are inexpensive and typically snap or screw into place.

 

5. Standpipe or Home Plumbing Issue

Sometimes the washer itself is fine. The problem may be your home’s plumbing. The standpipe, or the wall drain your hose empties into, may be partially clogged, too narrow, or set at the wrong height, causing water to back up into the machine.

How to check:

  • Pour water directly into the standpipe with the drain hose disconnected and see if it drains freely.
  • Check whether other nearby drains, such as a sink or tub, are also draining slowly, which suggests a broader clog in your home’s drain line.
  • Listen for gurgling from nearby drains while the washer is running. Gurgling often indicates a venting issue in the drain stack.

2026 context: An increasing number of homeowners are discovering that their standpipes, originally installed for older, smaller washers, can’t handle the higher drain flow rates of modern high-efficiency machines. If your standing water problem started after replacing an old washer with a new high-capacity model, this is worth investigating before assuming the new machine is defective.

 

6. Unbalanced Load or Overloading

Modern washers have sensors that detect excessive drum imbalance during the spin cycle. If an imbalance is detected, the machine pauses or stops, sometimes before the final drain cycle completes. The result: standing water in the drum.

Causes and fixes:

  • Overloading: Stick to the manufacturer’s rated capacity. Overloading strains the drainage system and is one of the leading causes of intermittent drainage failures.
  • Washing similar items together: A drum full of heavy bath towels can clump to one side. Mix item sizes and weights.
  • Unlevel machine: Check that all four feet are making solid contact with the floor. An unlevel washer can trigger balance sensors even with normal loads.

 

Bonus: Why New High-Efficiency Washers Experience More Drainage Complaints

HE washers use significantly less water per cycle than traditional top-loaders, which is great for utility bills but creates a quirk: because there’s less water volume to dilute buildup, lint, detergent residue, and mineral deposits accumulate faster in filters and hoses. Homeowners switching from a conventional top-loader to an HE front-loader often find they need to clean the filter monthly rather than quarterly.

Additionally, HE machines require HE-labeled detergent in smaller amounts. Using regular detergent, or too much HE detergent, creates excess suds that can overwhelm the drain system and leave sudsy standing water in the drum. Many machines, including Samsung, LG, and Whirlpool models, may show a “SUD” or “Sd” error code in this scenario.

 

How to Remove Standing Water from Your Washing Machine Drum

Before you can make any repairs, you’ll need to get the water out. Here are your options, from simplest to most hands-on:

Method 1: Run the “Drain & Spin” cycle. Many machines have a dedicated drain-only mode. Try this first. If it works, your problem may be intermittent.

Method 2: Gravity drain through the hose. Unplug the machine. Detach the drain hose from the standpipe and lower it into a bucket positioned on the floor. Let gravity do the work. You’ll likely need to empty the bucket several times.

Method 3: Drain via the filter access port. On front-loaders with an accessible filter panel, slowly open the filter cover with towels positioned underneath. The water drains gradually through the port. Empty the pan as needed.

Method 4: Siphon. Place one end of a garden hose or tube into the drum and the other end into a drain or bucket at floor level. Start the siphon using a hand pump or suction and let gravity clear the water.

 

Preventive Maintenance Schedule

Consistent maintenance is the single most effective way to avoid standing water problems. Here’s a practical schedule:

Frequency

Task

After every load

Empty pockets before washing; leave the door/lid ajar to let the drum dry

Monthly

Clean the drain filter; run a cleaning cycle monthly (hot water + washing machine cleaner or white vinegar)

Every 3 months

Inspect the drain hose for kinks or cracks; wipe door gasket/seal

Every 6 months

Check all hose connections for tightness; verify machine is still level

Annually

Inspect inlet hoses for wear and replace if cracked or bulging

Additional tips:

 

When to Call a Professional

Most standing water issues are DIY-friendly, but some situations warrant a service call:

  • The drain pump requires replacement and you’re not comfortable with appliance disassembly.
  • Your machine’s control board appears to be malfunctioning.
  • Water damage has occurred on your floors or subfloor.
  • You suspect a main drain line clog because multiple household drains are slow simultaneously.
  • The machine is under warranty and unauthorized repair would void coverage.
  • The problem keeps returning despite your troubleshooting efforts.

For brand-specific drain issues, see our symptom guides: Kenmore washer won’t drain, Samsung washer not draining, GE washer won’t spin or drain, and Hotpoint washer not draining.

 

Does a Home Warranty Cover Washing Machine Drainage Issues?

Appliance repair costs have risen significantly. The average washing machine repair now runs $150–$400 depending on the part and region, and a full pump replacement with labor can approach $300. A home warranty with appliance coverage can offset these costs substantially.

A quality home warranty plan typically covers mechanical and electrical component failures, including drain pumps, motors, and lid sensors, due to normal wear and tear. What’s generally not covered: cosmetic damage, misuse, and damage from failure to maintain the appliance, such as a catastrophically clogged filter that was never cleaned. To understand how this differs from what comes in the box, see our guide on home warranty vs. manufacturer warranty.

If you’re weighing your options, look for a plan that covers all mechanical components of the washer, not just specific named parts. Consider whether extended warranties make sense for your appliance age and budget. Liberty Home Guard’s washing machine coverage includes all mechanical components and parts, including pump and motor failures.

Note that standpipe/plumbing issues may not be covered under a standard appliance plan. A separate systems plan or combined coverage is needed if the fault lies in your home’s drain lines rather than the machine itself.

For brand-specific warranty details, see our guides for Samsung, Whirlpool, GE, and Kenmore appliances.

 

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