A dishwasher not draining on a Monogram built-in is one of the most common faults, and it almost always traces to a blockage in the drain path rather than a failed pump. Standing water at the bottom after a cycle points you straight to the filter, the hose, the air gap, or the disposer connection – all things you can check yourself first.
Why a dishwasher not draining happens
- Clogged filter – food debris in the bottom filter blocks the sump.
- Blocked air gap – the countertop air gap clogs and backs water up.
- Kinked or clogged drain hose – a tight bend or grease build-up stops flow.
- Disposer knockout – a new disposer connection with the plug still in place blocks the drain.
First checks
Remove and rinse the bottom filter, clear the air gap, and straighten the drain hose. If the dishwasher drains into a garbage disposer that was recently installed, confirm the knockout plug was removed.
Read the display
- C1 – drain time exceeded about 2 minutes (air gap, hose, or pump).
- C2 – total pump-out exceeded about 7 minutes.
- C3 – drainage failure (no or slow drain).
These C-codes point at the drain path; clear the filter, hose, and air gap first. See the full list in our dishwasher error code archive. If water also pools because the spray is weak, see our spray arm blockages guide.
When to call a technician
If the filter, hose, and air gap are clear and a C-code persists, the drain pump or check valve may have failed. Our dishwasher repair service can diagnose it – book a visit. Drain-connection specs for your model are on the manufacturer’s site, monogram.com.
Reading the C-Codes When Water Will Not Leave the Tub
A Monogram dishwasher not draining is one of the few problems the machine will diagnose for you, because the ZDT series watches its own pump-out and posts a specific C-code the moment the timing falls outside the expected window. Learning to read those codes turns a vague it will not drain into a precise starting point.
The drainage codes cluster together and each describes a different failure of the same process:
- C1, drain time exceeded roughly two minutes; suspect the air gap, a kinked drain hose, or a struggling pump.
- C2, total pump-out exceeded about seven minutes, a more severe version of the same blockage.
- C3, drainage failure, with no drain or only a slow trickle.
- C4, over-fill after a power loss, which points at the float switch or a clogged drain rather than the pump itself.
- C5, pump-out time too short, the opposite signature, often a sensor or hose-routing issue.
For the common C1, C2, and C3 family, the owner-checkable causes are mechanical and external. Start at the air gap on the sink deck, clear any debris inside it. Then trace the drain hose for kinks or a sag holding standing water, and confirm it is not pushed too far into the household disposer or standpipe. If the dishwasher shares a disposer connection, make sure the disposer knockout plug was removed at installation and that the disposer itself is clear. Standing water in the tub can also hide debris over the sump filter, so remove the bottom rack and lift out the filter assembly to check for glass, labels, or food blocking the pump intake.
A C4 after a storm or breaker trip is different, it is a protective over-fill response, and clearing the standing water plus checking the float for free movement often resets it. If a drainage code returns immediately after you have cleared the air gap, hose, and filter, the drain pump or its control may have failed, and that is where certified technicians and genuine Monogram parts come in. Note any LEAK DETECTED or 999 message too: that is the leak-protection system cancelling the cycle, a separate fault from a simple drain blockage.
Book Monogram dishwasher service
If these steps do not resolve it, our certified technicians repair Monogram dishwasher units with genuine parts. Schedule a visit, see what our dishwasher repair service covers, or confirm your model on the manufacturer’s site at monogram.com.