If your Mitsubishi mini-split is not heating in winter, the most common causes are a mode setting issue, a dirty filter, or a defrost cycle in progress. In cold climates, two additional causes become relevant: the system's minimum operating temperature being exceeded, and the reversing valve failing to switch from cooling to heating mode. This guide walks through every cause in order.
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Check These First
1. Verify HEAT mode is selected. Press the MODE button until the sun (heating) icon appears on the remote display. In AUTO mode, the unit decides whether to heat or cool based on the setpoint — if the room is above the setpoint, it will not heat.
2. Check the setpoint. In heating mode, the setpoint must be higher than the current room temperature. If the room is 68°F and the setpoint is 65°F, heating will not engage.
3. Identify if it is a defrost cycle. During heating mode in cold weather, Mitsubishi units run automatic defrost cycles that last 2–10 minutes. During defrost, the outdoor fan stops and the indoor unit blows cool or ambient-temperature air. This is completely normal. Wait 10 minutes — if heating resumes, defrost was the cause.
Common Causes and Fixes
| Cause | DIY Fix? | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Wrong mode (Cool or Fan Only) | Yes | Switch to HEAT mode on remote |
| Defrost cycle in progress | N/A — normal | Wait 10 minutes; heating will resume |
| Dirty air filter | Yes | Clean filter; restart unit |
| Outdoor temperature below rated minimum | No — use backup heat | Standard M-Series: below −4°F / H2i: below −13°F |
| Stuck reversing valve | No | Call Mitsubishi Diamond Contractor |
| Low refrigerant | No | Call technician — EPA certified required |
| Error code active | Depends on code | Check LED blink pattern; see error code guide |
Temperature Limits: Standard vs H2i
The standard Mitsubishi M-Series is rated to heat down to approximately −4°F (−20°C) at reduced capacity. Below this temperature, the system may not operate reliably. The H2i Hyper-Heating series maintains operation down to −13°F (−25°C). If your outdoor temperatures regularly exceed these limits, the system is operating within its design constraints — supplemental backup heat is needed for the coldest periods.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my Mitsubishi blow cold air in heat mode?
The most common causes are an active defrost cycle (temporary, 2–10 minutes), a stuck reversing valve, or outdoor temperatures below the unit's rated minimum. A defrost cycle resolves on its own. A stuck reversing valve requires a technician — the valve must switch the refrigerant flow direction to enable heating, and if it fails to switch, the system continues cooling even in heat mode.
My Mitsubishi heats fine when it is 30°F but not when it is −10°F — is that normal?
For a standard M-Series, yes. Standard heat pumps lose heating capacity as outdoor temperatures drop. Below 0°F, output may be 50% or less of rated capacity. If you need reliable heating at −10°F and below, the H2i Hyper-Heating model is the appropriate choice for your climate.
Related reading:
→ Do Mini-Splits Work in Cold Weather?
→ Mitsubishi Hyper Heat Mini-Split: Is It Worth the Extra Cost?
→ Mini-Split Not Heating? 8 Common Causes and Fixes