RV Water Heater Not Working? Start Here Before You Replace It
When an RV water heater stops working, it is easy to assume the entire appliance has failed. However, most water heater problems are not mysterious, and many do not require replacing the complete unit.
The problem often comes down to one of a few basic issues:
The RV water heater tank is empty
The bypass valves are positioned incorrectly
Propane is not reaching the burner
The water heater is not receiving 12-volt control power
The electric heating element is not receiving 120-volt power
A thermostat, ECO, igniter, or circuit board has failed
Cold water is mixing into the hot-water plumbing
The key is to slow down, identify which system is causing the problem, and avoid replacing good parts.
Start With the Most Important Question: Is the Tank Full?
Before checking circuit boards, heating elements, propane valves, or thermostats, make sure the water heater tank actually contains water.
This is especially important after the RV has been winterized. During winterization, the water heater is normally drained and bypassed. When the RV is returned to service, those bypass valves must be restored to their normal operating positions.
It is possible to have water flowing from the faucets while the water heater tank remains empty.
Check the bypass valves
Depending on the RV, the water heater may have one, two, or three bypass valves. These valves are usually located behind the water heater, inside a cabinet, under a bed, or behind a removable access panel.
Make sure the plumbing is positioned so that cold water enters the water heater and hot water exits it.
A partially open bypass valve can also cause lukewarm water by allowing cold water to mix with the heated water.
Purge the air from the system
After restoring water to the RV:
Connect the RV to city water or turn on the water pump.
Open a hot-water faucet.
Allow the air to escape.
Keep the faucet open until water flows steadily without sputtering.
Do not turn on the electric heating element until you are confident the tank is full.
An electric heating element can burn out very quickly when operated in an empty tank.
You may also be able to carefully confirm that the tank contains water using the pressure-relief valve. However, the water heater must be cool, the system must not be under dangerous pressure, and you should never stand directly in front of the valve.
Identify What Type of Problem You Have
Before removing parts, decide which symptom best describes the problem.
No hot water when using propane
Possible causes include:
The propane tank is turned off
Empty or low propane tank
Air trapped in the propane line
Poor 12-volt power supply
Blown fuse
Dirty or blocked burner tube
Damaged igniter
Failed thermostat or ECO
Faulty circuit board
Gas-valve problem
No hot water when using electricity
Possible causes include:
Tripped circuit breaker
The water heater switch turned off
The outside water heater switch turned off
No 120-volt power
Burned or disconnected wiring
Failed heating element
Failed thermostat or ECO
Water gets warm but not hot enough
Possible causes include:
Outside shower valves left open
Cold water mixing into the hot-water system
Bypass valve partially open
Defective mixing valve, if equipped
Thermostat problem
Sediment or mineral buildup
Heavy hot-water usage
Expectations beyond what a six-gallon tank can provide
Breaking the problem into one of these categories makes troubleshooting much easier.
Understand the Two Water Heater Systems
Many RV water heaters can operate on both propane and electricity. Although these systems heat the same tank, they should be diagnosed separately.
The propane side and electric side can fail independently.
Propane operation
The propane side uses propane to create the flame, but it still needs 12-volt DC power to operate the control system. The circuit board, igniter, gas valve, and safety controls normally depend on the RV’s 12-volt electrical system.
A propane water heater may therefore fail even when the propane tank is full if the battery is discharged, a fuse is blown, or a 12-volt connection is poor.
Electric operation
The electric side typically uses a heating element powered by 120-volt AC electricity.
This means the RV usually needs to be connected to shore power or another suitable 120-volt power source. The breaker, switches, wiring, thermostat, ECO, and heating element all become part of the electric-side diagnosis.
An RV water heater may look like one appliance, but troubleshooting it can involve three different systems:
Propane
12-volt DC control power
120-volt AC heating power
Keeping those systems separate will prevent a great deal of confusion.
Troubleshooting the Propane Side
Start with the simplest questions.
Is propane available?
Check that the propane tank contains fuel and that the service valve is open.
Try another propane appliance, such as the stove. If no propane appliances work, the problem may be with the propane supply rather than the water heater.
If the propane tank recently ran empty or was replaced, air may be trapped in the line. Lighting a stove burner can help confirm that propane has reached the RV’s appliances.
Does the water heater try to ignite?
Turn on the propane water heater and listen carefully.
It clicks but does not light
If you hear the igniter clicking but the burner does not light, consider:
No propane reaching the burner
Air in the propane line
Dirty burner assembly
Blocked burner tube
Incorrect igniter position
Weak or damaged spark
Gas-valve problem
It lights and then shuts off
If the burner ignites but quickly goes out, possible causes include:
Poor flame sensing
Dirty or damaged igniter
Weak propane flow
Poor electrical ground
Wiring problem
Faulty circuit board
On many systems, the igniter also acts as the flame sensor. If the control board does not recognize a proper flame, it will shut off the gas valve as a safety measure.
There is no clicking
If nothing happens when the propane switch is turned on, check for:
A blown fuse
Low battery voltage
No 12-volt power
Bad switch
Loose wiring
Tripped ECO
Failed thermostat
Faulty circuit board
Visual inspection and basic cleaning are reasonable DIY steps. However, propane is not a system for guessing.
If you smell propane, find burned wiring, see damaged components, or are unsure about testing the gas system, shut everything down and have the water heater inspected by a qualified RV technician.
Troubleshooting the Electric Side
The electric side normally uses a heating element installed in the water heater tank.
Check the breaker
Locate the RV’s 120-volt circuit-breaker panel and identify the breaker for the water heater.
A breaker may appear to be on even when it has tripped. Move it fully to the off position before resetting it to on.
If the breaker trips again, do not continue resetting it. A repeated trip can indicate a wiring problem, short circuit, damaged element, or another electrical failure that requires proper testing.
Check every water heater switch
Some RVs have more than one electric water heater switch.
You may find:
A switch inside the RV
A switch on the water heater itself
A switch near the main control panel
A breaker in the 120-volt distribution panel
The outside switch is easy to overlook, especially after winterization or maintenance.
Consider the heating element
A failed heating element is a common electric-side problem.
One of the fastest ways to damage an element is to turn it on while the tank is empty. This often happens after winterizing when the bypass valves have not been returned to the correct positions.
A heating element can be checked with a multimeter, but the power must be disconnected and the test must be performed correctly.
Because this circuit uses 120-volt electricity, do not work on energized wiring unless you are trained and equipped to do so safely.
Inspect visible wiring
With all power safely disconnected, look for:
Loose terminals
Burned connectors
Melted insulation
Corroded connections
Broken wires
Do not assume that replacing the heating element will correct damaged wiring or a poor connection.
Do Not Overlook the Outside Shower
Sometimes the water heater is operating correctly, but cold water is mixing into the hot-water plumbing.
The outside shower is a common source of this problem.
If both the hot and cold faucet knobs are left open while the water is shut off at the showerhead, cold water can cross over into the hot-water line. This may make the water at the kitchen or bathroom faucet feel only lukewarm.
To check it, turn both outside shower valves completely off.
A similar problem can occur with certain handheld showerheads, spray hoses, or plumbing fixtures that allow water to be stopped at the sprayer while both faucet valves remain open.
Before replacing a thermostat, element, or water heater, make sure the plumbing is not mixing cold water into the hot side.
Check the Thermostat and ECO
RV water heaters normally use a thermostat to control water temperature and an ECO, or emergency cutoff, as a safety device.
The thermostat tells the water heater when to turn the burner or element on and off. The ECO helps shut the system down if the water temperature becomes unsafe.
Depending on the model, a failed thermostat or ECO can affect propane operation, electric operation, or both.
Some water heaters have a reset button on the outside of the unit. If the ECO has tripped, it may be possible to reset it after the water heater has cooled.
However, a safety control that repeatedly trips should not be ignored. The cause may need to be diagnosed rather than repeatedly resetting the device.
When Should You Replace a Part?
A failed component does not automatically mean the entire water heater needs to be replaced.
Common replaceable parts include:
Electric heating element
Thermostat and ECO kit
Igniter
Circuit board
Gas valve
Switch
Wiring connector
Drain plug
Anode rod
Pressure-relief valve
The correct replacement part will depend on the water heater’s manufacturer and model number.
Anode rods and drain plugs are not interchangeable
Many Suburban-style tank water heaters use an anode rod. The anode rod is designed to corrode so that the steel tank is protected.
Many Atwood or Dometic-style aluminum tanks use a drain plug instead of a magnesium anode rod.
Always identify the water heater before installing drain components. Do not assume every RV water heater uses the same plug or anode rod.
When Should You Replace the Whole Water Heater?
Complete replacement may make sense when:
The tank is leaking
The tank is badly corroded
The tank has freeze damage
Several expensive components have failed
Repair parts are no longer available
The water heater is old and the repair cost is too high
Wiring or structural damage makes repair impractical
A leaking tank is much more serious than a failed element, thermostat, or circuit board.
Before replacing the water heater, confirm that the leak is actually coming from the tank. Water can also leak from the drain plug, anode rod, pressure-relief valve, plumbing fittings, or connections behind the unit.
Age, condition, parts availability, and labor should all be considered.
Tools and Parts Worth Keeping in Your RV
A small water heater service kit can make roadside troubleshooting much easier.
Useful items may include:
Basic multimeter
Screwdrivers
Socket for the drain plug or anode rod
Small brush for cleaning the burner area
Correct replacement drain plug or anode rod
Appropriate thread sealant
Flashlight
Spare fuses
Thermostat and ECO kit for your model
Owner’s manual
One of the smartest things you can do is take a clear picture of the water heater’s model and serial-number label before you need parts.
Store that photo on your phone along with pictures of the water heater, wiring, plumbing connections, and control board. Having the correct model number can prevent wasted time and incorrect parts orders.
Safety Comes First
RV water heater troubleshooting may involve propane, 12-volt DC electricity, 120-volt AC electricity, hot water, and pressurized plumbing.
Basic inspections and simple checks are within the abilities of many RV owners. However, propane and 120-volt electricity should never become guessing games.
Stop and get qualified help when:
You smell propane
A breaker repeatedly trips
Wiring is burned or melted
You find signs of fire or overheating
The tank is leaking
You are unsure how to safely test an energized circuit
A safety device repeatedly shuts the water heater down
Knowing when to stop is part of being a capable DIY RVer.
Final Water Heater Troubleshooting Checklist
Before replacing your RV water heater, determine whether the problem is related to:
Water in the tank
Winterizing bypass valves
A partially open bypass valve
Cold-water crossover
Propane supply
Air in the propane line
12-volt control power
A fuse or switch
The burner or igniter
120-volt shore power
The circuit breaker
The electric heating element
The thermostat or ECO
The circuit board
An actual tank leak or tank failure
Most RV water heater problems are not solved by guessing.
Start by confirming that the tank is full. Then separate the propane system from the electric system and work through the simple checks before spending money on replacement parts.
A methodical diagnosis may reveal that the water heater itself is still perfectly usable—and that the real problem is a switch, valve, connection, or inexpensive replaceable part. RV Water Heater Repairs Made Simple.


