Testing Hot Water Heater Element: Upper vs Lower Elements

Dual-element electric tank water heaters use two heating elements—an upper and a lower—to heat water in stages. When hot water problems appear, the key question is: which element (or control) is failing? This guide explains how the upper and lower elements work, what symptoms each failure creates, and how to test them safely and correctly.

1) Upper vs lower: how dual-element heaters actually heat

In a typical dual-element tank water heater, the upper thermostat controls which element receives power. When the tank is cold, the system heats the top section first so you can get usable hot water sooner. After the upper region reaches temperature, power is directed to the lower element to heat the bulk of the tank.

Engineering note: a heating element is a component made of both conductive and insulating materials, designed for heating. In water heaters the element is typically an embedded/sheathed design—conductive coil inside insulation (often MgO) inside a metal sheath—so it transfers heat by conduction into the water. This construction is efficient but sensitive to environment (scale buildup, hotspots, and “dry fire” events).

2) Symptom guide: which element is more likely?

Symptoms aren’t perfect, but they can quickly point you in the right direction. Use the table below to decide whether to start with the upper or lower element.

What you noticeMore consistent withWhy it fits
No hot water at all (always cold)Upper element failure, upper thermostat issue, or power issueUpper section never heats, so you don’t get a hot “top layer”
Some hot water, but it runs out quicklyLower element failureUpper makes a small hot zone; lower never restores full tank volume
Water is lukewarm even after waitingLower element weak/failing, heavy scale, or thermostat problemsTank may not reach setpoint or recovers slowly
Breaker trips when heater should runElement short-to-ground or wiring faultSheath insulation breakdown can leak to tank ground
Recent element replacement followed by immediate failureDry firing (powered before tank fully filled/purged)Unsubmerged element can burn out rapidly

3) Safety checklist before testing

Electric water heaters are usually 240V.
Turn power off at the breaker and verify it’s off before touching any wires. If you’re uncertain about electrical work, stop and call a qualified technician.

Before you touch element terminals

  1. Switch the water heater’s circuit breaker OFF (both poles).
  2. Remove upper (and lower) access covers; fold back insulation carefully.
  3. Verify power is OFF with a meter in voltage mode at the element terminals.
  4. Take a clear photo of wiring before disconnecting anything.
Do you need to drain the tank for testing?
Usually no. Resistance/ground tests are done at the element terminals with power off and wires disconnected. Draining is typically for replacement, not for diagnosis.

4) Test procedure (upper and lower): resistance + short-to-ground

To determine whether an element is good, you test: (A) resistance across the two element terminals, and (B) resistance from each terminal to the metal tank/element base (ground).

Test A: terminal ↔ terminal (Ω)
Test B: terminal → tank (Ω / continuity)

Step-by-step (do this for upper, then lower)

  1. With breaker OFF and power verified off, disconnect both wires from the element terminals (isolate the element).
  2. Set multimeter to Ω.
  3. Test A: probe one terminal with each lead. Record the reading.
    • OL/∞ = open element (failed)
    • Finite stable Ω = element likely intact
  4. Test B: probe one terminal and then touch the other probe to bare metal on the tank or element’s metal mounting/base. Repeat for the other terminal.
    • Any continuity/low Ω to tank = short-to-ground (failed)
    • OL/very high Ω to tank = insulation likely OK
Pass condition (most practical):
  • Across terminals: finite, stable resistance (not OL).
  • Terminal-to-tank: no continuity / very high resistance.

5) Best testing sequence (fastest to answer “which one?”)

If you want the fastest path to a clear answer, test in this order:

If you have no hot water

  1. Check power/breaker and high-limit reset (if your model has one).
  2. Test the upper element (A and B).
  3. If upper passes, test the lower element.
  4. If both pass, move to thermostat/control diagnosis.

If you have some hot water but it runs out fast

  1. Test the lower element first (A and B).
  2. Then test the upper element.
  3. If both pass, check thermostats, dip tube, and recovery expectations.

Why “upper vs lower” failures feel different

When the upper element is open, the tank may never establish a hot top layer, so faucets stay cold. When the lower element is open, you may still get a short burst of hot water (upper zone heats), but the tank won’t replenish heat after you draw a few gallons. That’s why the same “no hot water” complaint can mean two different repairs.

6) If an element fails: replacement workflow (high-level)

If your tests show an element is open or shorted, replacement is common—and the safety steps are as important as the wrench work. Below is a high-level workflow consistent with typical manufacturer guidance.

Critical warning:
Do not restore electrical power until the tank is completely full of water and all air is purged. Powering an element “dry” can burn it out immediately.

Replacement steps (summary)

  1. Run hot water until it’s cool (can take 10+ minutes) to reduce scalding risk.
  2. Turn cold water supply OFF.
  3. Connect a garden hose to the drain valve; route to drain/outside/bucket.
  4. Open the drain valve and drain the tank completely (opening a hot faucet helps). If clogged by sediment, get assistance.
  5. Remove the bad element using an element wrench or a 1 1/2″ deep well socket.
  6. Verify new element is correct by checking the water heater data plate for voltage and wattage.
  7. Clean tank threads; install gasket on element.
  8. Lubricate gasket with a drop of hand dishwashing liquid to avoid gasket damage as it tightens.
  9. Install new element and tighten.
  10. Reconnect power wires tightly (still keep breaker OFF).
  11. Close drain valve; turn cold water ON to refill tank.
  12. Remove aerator at nearest hot faucet; run hot water until full stream, then keep running for THREE MINUTES to purge air.
  13. Check for leaks; if leaking persists, drain, inspect gasket, and reinstall/replace gasket.
  14. Replace plastic protector, insulation, and covers.
  15. Turn breaker ON. Expect up to two hours for full recovery.

7) If both elements pass: what to check next

When both elements test good (finite resistance across, no short-to-ground), your “no hot water” issue is more likely in controls, wiring, or supply conditions.

Thermostats / high-limit

Dual-element heaters rely on thermostats to switch power between upper and lower elements. A failed thermostat or a tripped high-limit can stop heating even with good elements.

Wiring and connections

Loose screws, overheated terminals, and damaged insulation can interrupt current flow. Heat damage at terminals is a warning sign of resistance and arcing.

Scale / environment

Water chemistry and scale can reduce heat transfer and create hotspots. Even “good” elements may struggle if heavily scaled, affecting recovery time and perceived capacity.

Expectations vs capacity

High hot-water demand can outrun tank capacity. If the lower element is working but recovery is slow, confirm tank size, setpoint, and usage pattern.


FAQ

Do upper and lower elements have different resistance values?

Often they are the same wattage and will read similarly, but not always. The most important thing is that each element shows a stable, finite resistance across its terminals and does not show continuity to the tank.

Can I replace just one element?

Yes—if testing shows only one failed. Many homeowners replace the failed element only, but if the heater is old or both elements show damage/scale, replacing both may reduce repeat service.

Why does the upper element sometimes fail first?

Causes vary, but common contributors include dry firing after service/refill, control problems that keep one zone heating excessively, or local hotspots from poor heat transfer. Environment and thermal cycling also influence element life over time.

What type of heating element construction is used in water heaters?

Many tank water heaters use embedded/sheathed elements: a conductive coil inside electrically insulating material (often MgO) inside a metal sheath. This design is efficient for conductive heat transfer into water, but it must remain electrically isolated from the tank and properly submerged during operation.

Disclaimer: This article is general information and does not replace your water heater’s manual, labels, or local safety requirements. If you are unsure about any electrical steps or see damaged wiring, contact a qualified technician.

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Mari Cheng

Hello everyone, I am Mari Cheng, the "electric heating person" of Jinzhong Electric Heating Technology. Our factory has been engaged in electric heating components for 30 years and has served more than 1,000 domestic and foreign customers. In the following blogs, I will talk about the real knowledge of electric heating components, the production stories in the factory, and the real needs of customers. If you have any questions, please comment or poke me directly, I will tell you everything I know~

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