When a mini-split's outdoor unit does not turn on — the indoor unit appears to work, the fan may blow air, but the outdoor unit is completely silent — cooling or heating cannot occur. The outdoor unit houses the compressor and condenser coil that do the actual work of the refrigeration cycle. This guide identifies every reason the outdoor unit stays off and gives you a clear diagnostic path to find the specific cause.
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How to Confirm the Outdoor Unit Is Not Running
Listen at the outdoor unit. A running outdoor unit produces: a fan blade spinning (visible through the top grill), a low-frequency compressor hum, and warm discharge air from the top in cooling mode. If you hear and see nothing — completely silent with no fan — the outdoor unit is not receiving a start signal or is blocked from starting.
Causes in Order of Likelihood
| Cause | Signs | DIY? | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3-minute startup protection delay | Unit recently powered on or reset | Yes | Wait 3 full minutes after power-on before checking |
| Outdoor unit disconnect switch OFF | Grey disconnect box near outdoor unit; switch in OFF position | Yes | Flip the outdoor disconnect to ON |
| Tripped dedicated breaker | Breaker for outdoor unit in OFF or TRIPPED position | Yes | Reset breaker; if it trips again, call electrician |
| Communication error — no start signal reaching outdoor unit | E6/U4/CH05 communication code on indoor unit display | Partially | Reset at breaker; inspect signal wire connections at both terminals |
| Active protection code blocking outdoor start | Error code on indoor display (E1, E2, E4, etc.) | Partially | Note code; address underlying fault; reset at breaker |
| Failed outdoor PCB / inverter board | Power confirmed at outdoor unit; no start; no code | No | Call technician — outdoor board diagnosis and replacement |
| Seized compressor | Compressor draws high current; breaker trips; or thermal protection triggers | No | Call technician — compressor test; replacement or new system decision |
Always Check the Outdoor Disconnect First
The outdoor unit disconnect is one of the most-overlooked causes of outdoor unit failure. It is located in a grey weatherproof box mounted on the wall within 3–6 feet of the outdoor unit. After an HVAC service visit, after winter shutdown procedures, or after any electrical work nearby, this switch may be in the OFF position. A 10-second walk to the outdoor unit and a flip of this switch resolves the problem immediately — before any other diagnostic work.
Frequently Asked Questions
My outdoor unit made a loud noise and then stopped — will it restart?
A loud noise before stopping typically indicates one of three things: a debris strike on the fan blade (a twig, stone, or ice chunk), a capacitor failing at the moment of startup (produces a loud click or bang before the compressor stops), or the compressor itself hitting its thermal protection limit. Let the unit cool for 30 minutes, check for visible debris in the fan area with power off, then attempt a restart. If it trips again immediately, call a technician with a description of the sound.
Related reading:
→ Mini-Split Compressor Not Running: Causes and Fixes
→ Mini-Split Tripping the Breaker: Every Cause and Fix
→ Mini-Split E6 Error Code: Communication Fault — All Brands