Refrigerators Medium Severity
F2 Appliance Error Code

Liebherr Refrigerators F2 Error: Refrigerator Evaporator Sensor Fault

What Does Liebherr Refrigerator F2 Mean? The F2 fault code on a Liebherr refrigerator indicates a fault in the refrigerator-side evaporator sensor. Liebherr combination units use multiple temperature sensors: F1 covers the air sensor that reads cabinet air temperature, while F2 covers the evaporator sensor that reads the actual coil temperature. The board uses the […]

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

Maybe. After a manual defrost the unit can run for several days while you schedule service. Without intervention, ice will rebuild and cooling will weaken again within a week.

Can I reset the code?

No. F2 reflects a hardware failure on the sensor or its harness. There is no software reset for a failed sensor element — the part itself must be replaced.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: Cabinet temperature exceeds 45°F after a manual defrost, F2 paired with F1 (compartment air sensor).

Symptoms You May Notice

Refrigerator compartment cooling weakens over several days

Cabinet temperature is normal at first but slowly creeps upward as ice accumulates on the evaporator and progressively blocks airflow.

Visible frost or ice buildup behind the rear interior wall

Without a working defrost cycle, frost accumulates on the evaporator coil and becomes visible through the ventilation slots on the rear interior panel.

F2 code displayed, often without an immediate temperature alarm

The fault appears on the display and in the SmartDevice app, but cabinet temperature alarms may not trigger until ice buildup is severe enough to block airflow.

Defrost cycle does not run on its normal schedule

The defrost cycle is timed off the evaporator sensor reading; without that input the firmware skips defrost cycles, which is why ice progressively accumulates on the coil.

Possible Causes

1

NTC sensor element failed open or short

The evaporator sensor thermistor has failed after years of cold-temperature operation and defrost-cycle thermal stress.

Requires Professional
2

Sensor harness damaged by ice buildup

Ice that should have melted during defrost cycles has grown into the sensor harness and crushed the wires, opening the circuit. This is a downstream effect of an earlier defrost problem.

Requires Professional
3

Sensor mounting clip dislodged

The clip holding the sensor against the evaporator coil has come loose, leaving the sensor reading air temperature instead of coil temperature — which the firmware flags as out-of-range.

Requires Professional

Safe Checks You Can Do

These checks are safe for homeowners. No disassembly required. Do not remove panels or access internal components.
  1. 1

    Manually defrost the unit

    Move all refrigerator contents to a cooler with ice. Switch the unit off at the wall outlet, leave the door open, and let the cabinet defrost completely (4–8 hours). Place towels at the base to catch melt water. Restore power, return food, and watch whether F2 returns.

    A manual defrost buys you several days of normal operation while you schedule professional service.

  2. 2

    Note the timeline of the fault

    Check the SmartDeviceBox app history if available. F2 that appeared days or weeks ago and has been silently progressing is more common than a sudden onset. The technician will want to know how long the fault has been present.

    F2 + visible ice buildup means the defrost cycle has not been working — schedule service within the week.

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • Heavy ice buildup visible through the rear ventilation slots
  • Defrost cycle has not completed normally in recent weeks
  • Unit is more than 10 years old

Need Professional Help?

Find qualified technicians in your area for proper diagnostics and repair.

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