P0300 on Your Jeep Grand Cherokee - What's Wrong & What It Costs

2011-2023 Jeep Grand Cherokee
P0300
Random/Multiple Cylinder Misfire Detected - Jeep Grand Cherokee
On the 2011-2023 Jeep Grand Cherokee, P0300 is most often caused by an aging ignition coil pack on cylinder 1 - a $50-$120 part that fails between 80k and 130k miles
Moderate-High Severity $80-$650 Repair Range DIY-Friendly
Plain English

What P0300 means for your Jeep Grand Cherokee

Your Camry's ECM detected that cylinder 1 isn't firing properly - the crankshaft position sensor saw the rotational speed dip slightly each time cylinder 1 was supposed to combust. On the 2.5L 2AR-FE and earlier 2AZ-FE, this almost always traces back to a tired ignition coil. Toyota's coils are durable but they have a typical service life of 80k-130k miles, and once one starts to break down it usually shows up as P0300 (or P0302/P0303/P0304) under load. The cylinder-1 coil sits at the front of the engine and runs slightly hotter than the rear coils, which is why it tends to fail first.

Get an Exact Diagnosis for Your Jeep Grand Cherokee

Our AI diagnostic report tells you which of these causes most likely matches your specific Jeep Grand Cherokee - before you spend $300 on the wrong part.

Run My P0300 Diagnosis →

🎯 Top Causes on the Jeep Grand Cherokee

35%
#1 MOST LIKELY
Hemi MDS Lifter Failure
5.7L Hemi Active Fuel Management (MDS) lifters collapse on cyl 1, 4, 6, 7. Causes ticking + multi-cylinder misfire. Fix: full lifter set + likely camshaft. MDS-delete tune common.
PART

🎯 Top Causes on the Jeep Grand Cherokee

,200–
60%
#1 CAUSE
Failing Cylinder 1 Ignition Coil
Toyota uses coil-on-plug (COP) ignition - one coil per cylinder bolted directly above the spark plug. After 80k-130k miles the secondary windings in the cylinder-1 coil break down and the spark gets weak under load. Easy diagnostic trick: swap the cylinder 1 coil with the cylinder 3 coil and clear the code. If the misfire moves to P0303, the coil is the problem. Denso and NGK make Toyota OEM-equivalent coils for around $50-$80 each. Replace all four coils as a set if mileage is high - they all age together.
OEM Coil
$80-$120
Aftermarket
$45-$70
w/Labor
$120-$280
25%
#2 CAUSE
Worn Spark Plug on Cylinder 1
The Camry's iridium plugs are spec'd for 100k miles but they wear early if oil consumption is present (especially on 2007-2009 2AZ-FE engines, which have a known oil-burning issue). A worn plug raises the firing voltage demand and overstresses the coil. Check the cylinder-1 plug for excessive gap, oil fouling, or a worn electrode. Use only Denso or NGK iridium plugs - cheap copper plugs cause repeat misfires within months on this engine.
Plugs (set 4)
$30-$60
V6 Plugs (6)
$45-$90
w/Labor
$80-$220
15%
#3 CAUSE
Fuel Injector Clog or Leak
If the cylinder-1 injector is partially clogged or leaking, the air-fuel ratio in that cylinder is wrong and you get a single-cylinder misfire that swaps when you swap injectors. Less common than coil/plug but worth checking after the easy stuff. Pull the injectors and have them flow-tested at a shop, or just replace the cylinder-1 injector with a known-good unit to confirm.
Injector
$60-$140
Flow Test
$80-$150
w/Labor
$150-$320
,500
LABOR
60%
#1 CAUSE
Failing Cylinder 1 Ignition Coil
Toyota uses coil-on-plug (COP) ignition - one coil per cylinder bolted directly above the spark plug. After 80k-130k miles the secondary windings in the cylinder-1 coil break down and the spark gets weak under load. Easy diagnostic trick: swap the cylinder 1 coil with the cylinder 3 coil and clear the code. If the misfire moves to P0303, the coil is the problem. Denso and NGK make Toyota OEM-equivalent coils for around $50-$80 each. Replace all four coils as a set if mileage is high - they all age together.
OEM Coil
$80-$120
Aftermarket
$45-$70
w/Labor
$120-$280
25%
#2 CAUSE
Worn Spark Plug on Cylinder 1
The Camry's iridium plugs are spec'd for 100k miles but they wear early if oil consumption is present (especially on 2007-2009 2AZ-FE engines, which have a known oil-burning issue). A worn plug raises the firing voltage demand and overstresses the coil. Check the cylinder-1 plug for excessive gap, oil fouling, or a worn electrode. Use only Denso or NGK iridium plugs - cheap copper plugs cause repeat misfires within months on this engine.
Plugs (set 4)
$30-$60
V6 Plugs (6)
$45-$90
w/Labor
$80-$220
15%
#3 CAUSE
Fuel Injector Clog or Leak
If the cylinder-1 injector is partially clogged or leaking, the air-fuel ratio in that cylinder is wrong and you get a single-cylinder misfire that swaps when you swap injectors. Less common than coil/plug but worth checking after the easy stuff. Pull the injectors and have them flow-tested at a shop, or just replace the cylinder-1 injector with a known-good unit to confirm.
Injector
$60-$140
Flow Test
$80-$150
w/Labor
$150-$320
,000–
,500
DIY
Hard
25%
#2 COMMON
3.6L Pentastar Rocker Arm Failure
2011-2013 Pentastar V6 has rocker arm class action - extended warranty 10yr/150K. Causes warm-startup misfires (P0301-P0306). Free fix if VIN qualifies.
PART
$0 (warranty)–,500
LABOR
$0–

🎯 Top Causes on the Jeep Grand Cherokee

,500
DIY
Hard
20%
#3 POSSIBLE
Aged Ignition Coils
Hemi/Pentastar coils fail in clusters at 100k+. Replace as a set - Hemi V8 has 16 plugs but only 8 coils.
PART
60%
#1 CAUSE
Failing Cylinder 1 Ignition Coil
Toyota uses coil-on-plug (COP) ignition - one coil per cylinder bolted directly above the spark plug. After 80k-130k miles the secondary windings in the cylinder-1 coil break down and the spark gets weak under load. Easy diagnostic trick: swap the cylinder 1 coil with the cylinder 3 coil and clear the code. If the misfire moves to P0303, the coil is the problem. Denso and NGK make Toyota OEM-equivalent coils for around $50-$80 each. Replace all four coils as a set if mileage is high - they all age together.
OEM Coil
$80-$120
Aftermarket
$45-$70
w/Labor
$120-$280
25%
#2 CAUSE
Worn Spark Plug on Cylinder 1
The Camry's iridium plugs are spec'd for 100k miles but they wear early if oil consumption is present (especially on 2007-2009 2AZ-FE engines, which have a known oil-burning issue). A worn plug raises the firing voltage demand and overstresses the coil. Check the cylinder-1 plug for excessive gap, oil fouling, or a worn electrode. Use only Denso or NGK iridium plugs - cheap copper plugs cause repeat misfires within months on this engine.
Plugs (set 4)
$30-$60
V6 Plugs (6)
$45-$90
w/Labor
$80-$220
15%
#3 CAUSE
Fuel Injector Clog or Leak
If the cylinder-1 injector is partially clogged or leaking, the air-fuel ratio in that cylinder is wrong and you get a single-cylinder misfire that swaps when you swap injectors. Less common than coil/plug but worth checking after the easy stuff. Pull the injectors and have them flow-tested at a shop, or just replace the cylinder-1 injector with a known-good unit to confirm.
Injector
$60-$140
Flow Test
$80-$150
w/Labor
$150-$320
00–$600
LABOR

🎯 Top Causes on the Jeep Grand Cherokee

00–
60%
#1 CAUSE
Failing Cylinder 1 Ignition Coil
Toyota uses coil-on-plug (COP) ignition - one coil per cylinder bolted directly above the spark plug. After 80k-130k miles the secondary windings in the cylinder-1 coil break down and the spark gets weak under load. Easy diagnostic trick: swap the cylinder 1 coil with the cylinder 3 coil and clear the code. If the misfire moves to P0303, the coil is the problem. Denso and NGK make Toyota OEM-equivalent coils for around $50-$80 each. Replace all four coils as a set if mileage is high - they all age together.
OEM Coil
$80-$120
Aftermarket
$45-$70
w/Labor
$120-$280
25%
#2 CAUSE
Worn Spark Plug on Cylinder 1
The Camry's iridium plugs are spec'd for 100k miles but they wear early if oil consumption is present (especially on 2007-2009 2AZ-FE engines, which have a known oil-burning issue). A worn plug raises the firing voltage demand and overstresses the coil. Check the cylinder-1 plug for excessive gap, oil fouling, or a worn electrode. Use only Denso or NGK iridium plugs - cheap copper plugs cause repeat misfires within months on this engine.
Plugs (set 4)
$30-$60
V6 Plugs (6)
$45-$90
w/Labor
$80-$220
15%
#3 CAUSE
Fuel Injector Clog or Leak
If the cylinder-1 injector is partially clogged or leaking, the air-fuel ratio in that cylinder is wrong and you get a single-cylinder misfire that swaps when you swap injectors. Less common than coil/plug but worth checking after the easy stuff. Pull the injectors and have them flow-tested at a shop, or just replace the cylinder-1 injector with a known-good unit to confirm.
Injector
$60-$140
Flow Test
$80-$150
w/Labor
$150-$320
50
DIY
Easy
12%
#4 POSSIBLE
Worn Spark Plugs
Hemi runs 16 plugs (2 per cylinder), Pentastar 6 plugs. Overdue plugs cause multi-cyl misfires. NGK or Champion spec, $40-

🎯 Top Causes on the Jeep Grand Cherokee

20.
PART
$40–

🎯 Top Causes on the Jeep Grand Cherokee

60
LABOR

🎯 Top Causes on the Jeep Grand Cherokee

00–
00
DIY
Medium
8%
#5 POSSIBLE
Cracked Exhaust Manifold (Hemi)
Hemi exhaust manifold cracks let in oxygen, lean condition causes misfires.
PART
60%
#1 CAUSE
Failing Cylinder 1 Ignition Coil
Toyota uses coil-on-plug (COP) ignition - one coil per cylinder bolted directly above the spark plug. After 80k-130k miles the secondary windings in the cylinder-1 coil break down and the spark gets weak under load. Easy diagnostic trick: swap the cylinder 1 coil with the cylinder 3 coil and clear the code. If the misfire moves to P0303, the coil is the problem. Denso and NGK make Toyota OEM-equivalent coils for around $50-$80 each. Replace all four coils as a set if mileage is high - they all age together.
OEM Coil
$80-$120
Aftermarket
$45-$70
w/Labor
$120-$280
25%
#2 CAUSE
Worn Spark Plug on Cylinder 1
The Camry's iridium plugs are spec'd for 100k miles but they wear early if oil consumption is present (especially on 2007-2009 2AZ-FE engines, which have a known oil-burning issue). A worn plug raises the firing voltage demand and overstresses the coil. Check the cylinder-1 plug for excessive gap, oil fouling, or a worn electrode. Use only Denso or NGK iridium plugs - cheap copper plugs cause repeat misfires within months on this engine.
Plugs (set 4)
$30-$60
V6 Plugs (6)
$45-$90
w/Labor
$80-$220
15%
#3 CAUSE
Fuel Injector Clog or Leak
If the cylinder-1 injector is partially clogged or leaking, the air-fuel ratio in that cylinder is wrong and you get a single-cylinder misfire that swaps when you swap injectors. Less common than coil/plug but worth checking after the easy stuff. Pull the injectors and have them flow-tested at a shop, or just replace the cylinder-1 injector with a known-good unit to confirm.
Injector
$60-$140
Flow Test
$80-$150
w/Labor
$150-$320
00–$500
LABOR
00–$800
DIY
Hard

🚗 Most Affected Camry Model Years

YearEnginePrimary CauseTypical MileageNotes
2010-20172.5L 2AR-FECoil pack80k-130kMost common P0300 reports
2007-20092.4L 2AZ-FECoil + oil-fouled plug90k-160kOil consumption shortens plug life
2018+2.5L A25A-FKSCoil pack60k-90kNewer engine, fewer reports so far
2007-20173.5L 2GR-FE V6Rear-bank coils80k-130kRear coils harder to access

🔧 How to Diagnose P0300 on a Jeep Grand Cherokee

Want a step-by-step walkthrough specific to your Jeep Grand Cherokee? Run a $5.99 AI diagnosis report - we narrow the cause to your year, engine, and symptoms.

Skip the Guesswork on Your Jeep Grand Cherokee

Cause-ranked report with probabilities, parts list, and a printable summary you can hand to any shop.

Get My $5.99 Report →

See all P0300 causes (all vehicles) →

As an Amazon Associate AmpAuto earns from qualifying purchases. · Affiliate Disclosure · Privacy · Terms