Stiebel Eltron Part

Stiebel Eltron Heating Element

Solid-copper heating elements for Tempra Plus and DHC. Resistance test and replacement procedure.

Updated May 2026 · Stiebel Eltron Water Heaters

Stiebel Eltron Tempra Plus uses solid-copper heating elements — premium element design compared to the stainless-steel elements common in US-market electric tankless. Solid copper has better thermal conductivity, longer life, and tolerates hard-water scaling better.

Element specs by Tempra Plus model

ModelElement countWattage eachHealthy resistance
Tempra 12 Plus27.2 kW~8 Ω
Tempra 15 Plus27.2 kW~8 Ω
Tempra 20 Plus29.6 kW~6 Ω
Tempra 24 Plus38 kW~7.2 Ω
Tempra 29 Plus39.6 kW~6 Ω
Tempra 36 Plus312 kW~4.8 Ω

DHC element specs

ModelWattageHealthy resistance
DHC 4-23.8 kW~15 Ω
DHC 6-25.4 kW~11 Ω
DHC 8-27.2 kW~8 Ω
DHC 10-29.6 kW~6 Ω

Symptoms of element failure

  • E2 error on Tempra Plus display
  • Lukewarm output despite adequate flow and good incoming temp
  • Half-power output (one of two/three elements failed in larger Tempras)
  • Breaker trips immediately on call for hot water (element shorted)
  • Zero output even with adequate flow (all elements failed — rare)

Replacement procedure

  1. Power OFF at all breakers. Tempra Plus has 2-3 breakers; ALL must be off. Verify with voltage tester
  2. Close inlet shutoff; open hot tap downstream to relieve pressure
  3. Open the Tempra cabinet per service manual
  4. Identify the failed element from ohm test (see element test guide)
  5. Photograph wiring for reassembly reference
  6. Disconnect element leads at the contactor
  7. Unscrew element from chamber (typically threaded with gasket seal)
  8. Install new element with new gasket
  9. Reconnect leads per photo
  10. Restore water first — verify no leaks before powering up
  11. Restore power at all breakers
  12. Test operation at a hot tap; verify setpoint maintenance

Critical: never power up dry

Tempra Plus elements are exposed to water in normal operation; powering them up dry destroys them in seconds. Always restore water and verify presence at the unit before flipping breakers.

Cost

  • Tempra Plus element (OEM): $75-150 depending on model
  • DHC element: $50-100
  • Contractor labor: $200-400 for whole-house Tempra; $100-200 for DHC
  • Warranty replacement under 3 years parts — Stiebel covers part, homeowner labor

Element lifespan

  • Soft water with descaling: 12-18 years typical
  • Hard water without softener or descaling: 4-7 years
  • Very hard water without softener: 2-4 years (replace with water softener install)

Bottom line

Solid-copper Tempra elements are durable in soft water and serviceable. Hard water dramatically shortens life — install a softener or commit to annual descaling. Always power off ALL breakers and verify water before powering up after replacement.