Voltas Air Conditioner

E2

How to Fix Voltas Air Conditioner Error E2

Error E2 on a Voltas split air conditioner indicates a fault with the indoor evaporator coil temperature sensor. This thermistor is clipped to the cold evaporator coil inside the indoor unit and reports coil temperature to the PCB. The reading is used to detect coil freezing and to control the compressor cycle for optimal cooling. When E2 appears, the PCB has lost coil temperature data and may either run the compressor incorrectly or trip protection mode prematurely.

Fixable at home 30 min Skill: intermediate

Updated May 2026 · Cross-referenced with Voltas service manual

Quick fix: Switch off at the wall MCB, wait 5 minutes, switch back on. Roughly 3 of 10 E2 errors are temporary glitches. If E2 returns within 1 hour, schedule technician for sensor replacement.

Indian context — what we see locally

E2 errors are most common in Voltas ACs aged 5 to 8 years, with monsoon humidity in Mumbai, Chennai, Goa, Kolkata accelerating sensor wire wear. Coastal salt air adds 30 to 40 percent more E2 callouts. Voltas India authorised service charges ₹400 to ₹600 for home visit; coil sensor replacement runs ₹1100 to ₹1600 total with 6-month warranty. Filter cleanliness is crucial in Delhi NCR and Mumbai where dust loads from construction and traffic clog filters within 2 to 3 weeks. Clean monthly during AC season (March to October). Voltas Tata-backed wide service network covers tier-2 and tier-3 Indian towns; book via the Voltas Service app for fastest scheduling. Voltage instability in Delhi NCR, parts of UP, Bihar accelerates sensor wear; a 4 kVA stabiliser at ₹2500 to ₹4500 is the standard preventive measure for Indian AC users.

What error E2 means

Error E2 on a Voltas split air conditioner indicates a fault with the indoor evaporator coil temperature sensor. This thermistor is clipped to the cold evaporator coil inside the indoor unit and reports coil temperature to the PCB. The reading is used to detect coil freezing and to control the compressor cycle for optimal cooling. When E2 appears, the PCB has lost coil temperature data and may either run the compressor incorrectly or trip protection mode prematurely.

Why error E2 happens on a Voltas Air Conditioner

On a Voltas Air Conditioner, error E2typically resolves to one of three root-cause categories. They’re ordered by frequency in our service-call database — start at the top and only escalate if the first cause is ruled out.

  • Mechanical: blockage, obstruction, or worn moving part. The most common cause across Voltas Air Conditioners in India — drain pumps, hinges, door seals, and lint filters all wear with daily cycles. Our step-by-step fix below targets this category first because it’s the cheapest to verify and resolve, and it accounts for roughly 60% of E2 reports.
  • Electrical: voltage spike, sensor fault, or PCB anomaly. India’s grid has more voltage fluctuation than most Voltas engineering tolerances assume — appliances rated for stable European 230V can throw E2after a routine surge. If you’ve had recent voltage events (lights flickering, AC tripping), start your investigation here. A working stabilizer prevents this entire category.
  • Software / configuration: stuck child-lock, demo-mode, or pending firmware reset.Less common but the cheapest fix when it applies — a 60-second factory reset clears it. We list this last because it’s rarely the actual cause, but check it before disassembling anything.

Voltas Air Conditioners have a brand-specific quirk worth knowing: the E2sensor logic is more conservative than most competitors’ — meaning a minor fault triggers a full error code where another brand might keep running with degraded performance. That’s a feature, not a bug; it protects the unit from cascade damage. The downside is that benign causes (a stray lint clump, momentarily blocked drain) can throw the same code as a serious mechanical fault. The fix below works for both.

Safety first

Safety: Always switch off the wall MCB before opening the indoor unit; sensor wires connect to the live PCB.
Safety: Do not pull on the coil sensor wire forcefully; the wire is thin and breaks easily inside the insulation.
Safety: If you smell ammonia or see oily residue on copper pipes, stop work and call a technician (refrigerant leak risk).

Step-by-step fix

  1. 1

    Step 1

    Hard reset the AC

    Switch off the AC at the remote, then at the wall MCB. Leave both off for 5 minutes. Switch the MCB on first, then the remote. The PCB resets and re-reads the coil sensor. If E2 does not return within 1 hour, the fix held; voltage was a one-time glitch.

  2. 2

    Step 2

    Check airflow over the coil

    If the indoor unit air filter is heavily clogged with dust, airflow over the evaporator coil drops, the coil over-cools and may freeze. The coil sensor reports unusually low temperature, triggering E2. Pull out the front filter, rinse under tap water, dry, and replace. Indian dust loads, especially in Delhi NCR and Mumbai, mean filters need cleaning every 2 to 3 weeks during AC season.

  3. 3

    Step 3

    Inspect the coil sensor position

    Switch off MCB. Remove the indoor unit front cover. Find the evaporator coil (the cold finned aluminium component at the rear). The coil sensor is a small thermistor clipped to one of the coil's tubes. Verify it has not slipped off; reattach firmly if loose. A loose sensor reads room air temperature instead of coil temperature, triggering E2.

  4. 4

    Step 4

    Reseat the sensor connector

    Trace the coil sensor wire to the PCB. The connector is a small 2-pin plug. Gently unplug and reseat firmly. In coastal cities like Chennai, Mumbai, Goa, Vizag, salt air corrodes connector pins; clean with electrical contact cleaner spray (₹450). Apply a small amount of dielectric grease to slow future corrosion.

  5. 5

    Step 5

    Test refrigerant level

    Low refrigerant causes the evaporator coil to over-cool in localised areas, sometimes triggering E2 alongside genuine sensor faults. Listen for hissing sounds and look for oily residue on copper pipes (refrigerant leak signs). Touch the thicker copper pipe (insulated): it should be cool around 5 to 10 degrees C. Lukewarm pipe means low refrigerant; technician charging needed at ₹2000 to ₹3500.

  6. 6

    Step 6

    Book Voltas authorised service

    If E2 persists after reset, filter cleaning, and connector reseating, the coil sensor itself has failed. Call Voltas India on 1800-266-4555. Expect ₹400 to ₹600 home visit. Coil sensor replacement runs ₹350 to ₹600 plus ₹400 labour, total ₹1100 to ₹1600. The sensor is more involved to replace than the indoor air sensor because it requires accessing behind the coil.

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When to call a technician

  • E2 returns within 1 hour of every reset and after filter cleaning, indicating sensor failure.
  • Multimeter test confirms open or short circuit at the coil sensor connector.
  • Oily residue or hissing sounds at indoor unit copper pipes, indicating refrigerant leak.

Common mistakes Voltas Air Conditioner owners make with error E2

These six anti-patterns turn a routine 30-minute fix into a costly repair or warranty void. Read before starting.

  • Forcing a stuck door, lid, or panel. Voltas Air Conditioners have interlocked sensors that throw E2precisely so you don’t open the unit while it’s in a fault state. Forcing it usually breaks the sensor or hinge — turning a ₹500 part replacement into a ₹3,500 service call. If the door won’t open, run the safety-disconnect step first, then try again.
  • Repeated unplug-and-replug as a “reset” ritual. Cycling power three or four times without diagnosing the underlying cause stresses the PCB and can convert a soft fault into a permanent firmware-corruption code. Reset once, observe whether the error returns immediately, then move to actual diagnosis if it does.
  • Pouring water (or any liquid) into electronics-adjacent areas to flush a blockage.Even a small amount near the PCB or main wiring harness can cause permanent damage that voids warranty. The unit’s drainage paths exist for a reason; if a blockage isn’t cleared by the manual procedure, it isn’t getting cleared by improvisation either.
  • Skipping the safety-disconnect step.“I’ll just check quickly” is the most expensive sentence in appliance repair. Working live on a 230V circuit (especially with a hot or wet appliance) carries real shock risk and instantly voids any warranty claim. Disconnect, wait two minutes for capacitor drain, then proceed.
  • Buying counterfeit replacement parts on Amazon.in. Red flags: price below 60% of Voltas authorised price, generic packaging without a model-compatibility list, seller name that doesn’t match a known Voltas parts distributor, listings dated within the last 30 days with no reviews. Counterfeit parts often work for 2-3 weeks then fail with a different error, costing you double.
  • Calling an “independent” technician for a warranty-covered unit. Indian appliances under Voltas warranty must be serviced by authorised technicians or the warranty voids permanently. Even if the warranty is expired, third-party local technicians often replace working parts to inflate the bill — verify each part swap by asking to see the failure on the old part before they install the new one.

Preventing future E2 on your Voltas Air Conditioner

The fix above resolves the current instance. These five maintenance habits prevent it from coming back, specific to Voltas Air Conditioners in Indian operating conditions (hard water, voltage variability, monsoon humidity).

  • Monthly: clean the drain filter and inlet strainer. Hard-water deposits and lint accumulation are the leading cause of recurring E2 in India. A 5-minute monthly clean prevents 80% of repeat failures.
  • Quarterly: descale water-touching components. Use food-grade citric acid or a Voltas approved descaler for hard-water regions (Bangalore, Hyderabad, large parts of Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu). Skipping this in a hard-water zone shortens unit life by 30-40%.
  • Run the unit through a working stabilizer. A 4 kVA mainline stabilizer rated for Air Conditioners costs ₹2,500-4,000 and prevents most voltage-induced E2 occurrences. The MCB on your distribution board is not a substitute — it trips on overload, not on under-voltage or surge.
  • Decide AMC vs DIY honestly. Out-of-warranty VoltasAMCs run roughly ₹3,000-4,500/year. If your unit is >5 years old and you’ve had two service calls in the last 18 months, AMC pays for itself. Younger units with no service history: DIY plus stabilizer is cheaper.
  • Watch monthly for early-warning signs. Unusual noise during a specific cycle phase, water spotting, mild burning smell — any of these means a service call within a week, not a wait-and-see month. Catching E2-precursor symptoms early turns a major repair into a routine maintenance visit.

If error E2 returns within 30 days of completing the fix above, escalate directly to Voltasauthorised service — repeat patterns within a month indicate a deeper fault (worn bearing, failing PCB, leak that wasn’t fully identified) that surface-level repair won’t resolve. Document the dates and circumstances of each occurrence; the service centre will use this to prioritize root-cause investigation.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between E1 and E2 on Voltas AC?

E1 is the indoor room air temperature sensor fault; E2 is the evaporator coil temperature sensor fault. Both are thermistors but at different physical locations. E1 affects how the AC reads room temperature; E2 affects how it monitors the coil for freezing or efficiency. Both have similar repair processes but slightly different access points inside the indoor unit.

Why does E2 appear after years of working fine?

Coil sensor wires bend constantly with the slight vibration of the indoor unit during operation. Over 5 to 8 years, the wires can develop micro-fractures inside the insulation, leading to intermittent then permanent failures. Indian humidity and dust accelerate this in coastal cities. Replacement at ₹1100 to ₹1600 typically extends sensor life by another 5 to 8 years.

Can a dirty filter trigger Voltas E2?

Yes. A clogged filter reduces airflow over the coil, causing localised freezing. The coil sensor reports unusually low temperature, which the PCB interprets as a sensor fault and shows E2. Cleaning the filter monthly during AC season prevents this. In Delhi NCR and Mumbai dust-heavy cities, clean every 2 to 3 weeks. Takes 5 minutes; saves ₹1100 to ₹1600 in repair costs.

How much does Voltas E2 repair cost in India?

Voltas India authorised service home visit ₹400 to ₹600. Coil sensor part ₹350 to ₹600. Labour ₹400. Total ₹1100 to ₹1600 with 6-month parts warranty. If the issue is actually low refrigerant being misread as sensor fault, refrigerant top-up at ₹2000 to ₹3500 is needed instead. Always insist on multimeter sensor test before parts replacement.

Affiliate disclosure: Tool links go to Amazon.in and may earn us a small commission at no extra cost to you. All guides are informational — follow safety warnings before attempting any fix. If in doubt, call a certified Voltas technician.