Microwave Medium Severity
F6 Appliance Error Code

Monogram Microwave F6 Error: Touchpad / membrane switch failure

The F6 error code on a GE Monogram microwave indicates a fault with the touchpad or membrane switch assembly. The control board has detected an invalid or continuously active key signal from the touchpad — a condition caused by a degraded membrane, moisture infiltration under the keypad, or a damaged input circuit on the control board.

~45%

DIY Fixable

From $100

Typical Repair Cost

0.5-1 hrs

Pro Repair Time

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

No. Do not use the microwave while F6 is active. A shorted membrane contact can cause the magnetron to energize without user input, creating a safety hazard.

Can I reset the code?

No. A 60-second power reset clears the code if caused by a transient glitch. If the membrane has physically failed, F6 returns quickly after every reset and the touchpad must be replaced.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: Stop using the microwave immediately if it starts operating without any button press., Stop use and disconnect power if you see burn marks or smell burnt plastic from the control panel area..

Symptoms You May Notice

Microwave does not respond normally to touchpad input — some keys are unresponsive, produce wrong functions, or register without being pressed.

F6 code displayed on the microwave control panel, preventing normal operation.

Microwave starts or changes functions without any user input, indicating a stuck membrane contact.

Grease or moisture is visible around the edges of the touchpad membrane.

Possible Causes

1

Degraded or torn membrane touchpad — the flexible overlay layers have failed internally, causing one or more key contacts to short permanently.

DIY Possible
2

Moisture or grease infiltration under the keypad surface — cooking steam and grease bridge key contacts and create persistent shorts.

DIY Possible
3

Faulty control board input scanning circuit — if a new touchpad does not resolve F6, the board itself has a damaged key-scan input.

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

    Power-cycle the microwave

    Unplug the microwave from the wall outlet or trip its dedicated circuit breaker. Wait 60 full seconds, then restore power. Systematically test every key on the touchpad. If F6 does not return and all keys respond correctly, the fault was a transient event.

    Allow a full 60 seconds — this ensures the control board capacitors discharge completely and the firmware re-initializes from scratch.

  2. 2

    Inspect and clean the touchpad surface

    With the microwave unplugged, examine the touchpad carefully under good lighting for bubbling, delamination, cracks, or moisture around the membrane edges. Use a lightly dampened microfiber cloth with a drop of mild dish soap to clean the surface, then dry thoroughly.

    Hold a flashlight at a low angle to the surface — delamination and bubbles that are invisible under overhead light become apparent when viewed at a raking angle.

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • F6 returns immediately after installing a confirmed good replacement touchpad, indicating the control board input circuit has failed.
  • The microwave energizes its magnetron without user input — this is a safety hazard requiring immediate professional service.

Need Professional Help?

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