Gree Aircon H4 Error Code
Use this Gree H4 error code guide to decide when to stop resetting, what to capture, and what to check before parts are quoted.
What Does Gree H4 Mean?
Gree H4 is listed as overload protection in Ceiling Cassette, Ceiling Concealed Ducted, Ceiling Suspended rows such as U-Match duct type, U-Match cassette type. The loaded row is source-backed by official diagnostic material. Confirm the exact model, series, or signal row before accepting a parts quote.
Low refrigerant, active leak, restriction, or abnormal pressure reading.
Dirty condenser, weak outdoor fan, blocked airflow, or high-load operation.
Pressure sensor, expansion path, or compressor protection after readings are taken.
What To Do Now
Use these steps before another reset, gas work, pressure check, or parts quote.
Stop using the unit if H4 returns
Stop using the unit if H4 returns with weak cooling, frost, hissing, or outdoor-unit tripping.
Reset H4 once
Capture the H4 display, then power-cycle once only if the unit is not icing, leaking, or tripping. Do not use reset as a gas or pressure fix.
Send these to us
H4 error code, a clear display photo, Gree model stickers, affected rooms, reset result, and cooling-loss timeline and any recent gas top-up
Send Us What You're Seeing
Share H4, your Gree model, and what happened before it appeared. We'll read it and respond with the right next step before any work is approved.
What To Check Before Repair
Use this split to separate safe evidence capture from the tests a technician should prove before quoting parts.
| You Can Check | Technician Should Confirm |
|---|---|
| Before resetting H4, take a clear display photo. | Match H4 to low-pressure, high-pressure, leak, or refrigerant-cycle protection. |
| Capture the Gree indoor and outdoor model stickers so the correct family row is used. | Measure operating pressures, coil temperatures, airflow, and outdoor fan condition. |
| Note whether one room, several rooms, or the whole system is affected, plus whether it returns after one reset. | Leak-check or pressure-test before recommending another refrigerant top-up. |
What Changes The Next Step
These clues decide whether the first check is room-side, shared outdoor-side, refrigerant-side, source-table, or model-family confirmation.
| What You See | What It Points To |
|---|---|
| Only one indoor unit shows H4. | The affected room, indoor board path, wiring route, or local component should be checked first. |
| Several rooms or the outdoor unit show the same H4 fault. | The shared outdoor side, power path, communication trunk, or refrigerant circuit needs priority checking. |
| Cooling is weak, frost appears, or the outdoor unit trips under load. | Pressure, airflow, leak, and condenser checks should come before another top-up. |
| The model family is different from the row you found online. | Use the model or series filter first; same-looking codes can still belong to different diagnostic tables. |
| The model belongs to Ceiling Cassette, Ceiling Concealed Ducted, Ceiling Suspended rows such as U-Match duct type, U-Match cassette type. | The loaded row is source-backed by official diagnostic material. Use the matching source row before quoting parts. |
Pressure, Leak, Or Airflow Decision
Gree H4 needs measured pressure, airflow, and leak evidence before gas work is approved. Replacement only becomes serious when the leak, compressor, or coil repair is uneconomical.
A top-up alone is poor value if the leak source is not found.
High-pressure faults often come from airflow, condenser, fan, or overcharge conditions.
Coil leaks or compressor-related findings can shift older systems toward replacement.
Read Next
Use these if the quote mentions the parts, checks, or repair path this code points to.
Other Gree Error Codes
If the code you're seeing isn't H4, jump to one of these or browse the full Gree list.
Ready to Get Started?
Send the H4 error code, a clear display photo, and Gree model sticker. Send the model sticker so the matching official row can be checked quickly. We can help separate pressure, airflow, leak, and compressor checks.