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Furnace Pressure Switch Guide: Causes, Symptoms, and Fixes Minnesota

Published March 9, 2026Liquid error (sections/fd-article line 240): comparison of String with 86400 failed· 1 min read
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Furnace Pressure Switch Guide: Causes, Symptoms, and Fixes for Minnesota Homeowners

The pressure switch is a safety device that verifies your furnace's inducer motor is running and creating proper draft before allowing the gas valve to open. Pressure switch faults are one of the most common error codes Minnesota homeowners encounter—and many are caused by simple, fixable issues.

How the Pressure Switch Works

The inducer motor runs first in every heating cycle, creating negative pressure (suction) in the heat exchanger. The pressure switch is a small diaphragm device connected by a rubber hose to the inducer housing. When negative pressure reaches the set point, the switch closes and signals the control board that draft is confirmed—safe to proceed with ignition.

Common Pressure Switch Fault Causes

Blocked condensate drain: water backs up into the pressure switch hose, blocking the diaphragm. This is the #1 cause in winter. Cracked or disconnected hose: the small rubber hose connecting the switch to the inducer develops cracks over time. Failed inducer motor: if the motor is weak, it can't generate enough negative pressure. Blocked flue or intake pipe: often caused by ice or debris at the exterior vent termination.

Minnesota-Specific Pressure Switch Issues

Frozen condensate drain lines and ice-blocked vent terminations are uniquely common in Minnesota winters. A furnace that suddenly stops working on the coldest nights often has a frozen condensate or intake issue rather than a failed component. See our condensate drain guide and emergency guide.

When to Replace the Pressure Switch

After ruling out blockages and hose issues, a failed pressure switch itself costs $25–$80 and is straightforward to replace. See our control board guide. Furnace Direct carries Goodman replacement parts.

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