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OBD-II Diagnostic Report
DIAGNOSED
P0420
Catalyst Sys Efficiency · Bank 1 · Generic Powertrain

Catalyst System Efficiency Below Threshold

Your catalytic converter is not cleaning exhaust gases efficiently enough. The car drives fine, but real cost depends on which of 3 things is actually broken.

Vehicle Input
Step 1 / 1
Year01
Make02
Model03
2,847 diagnosed this week · Money-back guarantee
Severity
Moderate
Repair
$50–$2,400
Drive Now?
Yes, 2–4 wks
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⚡ Quick Answer

Just tell me what to do

1
The most likely problem: Your catalytic converter is wearing out (68% of P0420 cases). 2nd most likely is a $50 oxygen sensor. 3rd is a small exhaust leak.
$
What it'll probably cost: $600–$2,000 if it's the converter, $50–$120 if it's the sensor, $80–$300 if it's a leak. The trick is knowing which one before you spend a dollar.
What to do right now: Keep driving normally for 2–4 weeks. Don't buy parts on a hunch. Get a mechanic (or our $5.99 diagnosis) to run the O2 voltage test first, that single test tells you which of the 3 fixes you actually need.
More detail below Plain English The O2 Waveform Test Top Causes #1 Money Mistake Safe to Drive? What It Feels Like Affected Vehicles Diagnosis Steps P0420 vs P0430 Community Reports

What P0420 actually means

Your car's computer is saying the catalytic converter, which cleans your exhaust, isn't doing its job well enough. Think of it like a clogged filter for your exhaust pipe. The car will still drive fine, but it will fail emissions and should be fixed within 2–4 weeks. The fix is either a $50–$120 sensor, an $80–$300 exhaust leak repair, or a $600–$2,000 converter replacement. The next section shows the exact test mechanics use to tell which one you actually need.

The O2 voltage test (mechanics only)

P0420 exists because of one specific relationship: how the downstream O2 sensor responds compared to the upstream one. A healthy cat absorbs and releases oxygen, so the downstream signal goes nearly flat. A failed cat doesn't, so the downstream signal mirrors the upstream signal. This single test, done with a $30 OBD2 scanner that shows live data, will save you from replacing the wrong part.

LIVE O2 SENSOR TRACE
1V / div · 1s / div
✓ HEALTHY CATSwitch ratio <20%
UPSTREAM DOWNSTREAM
Downstream stays flat near 0.65V while upstream oscillates. Cat is absorbing oxygen properly.
✗ FAILED CATSwitch ratio >80%
UPSTREAM DOWNSTREAM
Downstream mirrors upstream. The cat substrate is dead. P0420 triggers.
Switch ratio = how many downstream switches per upstream switch. Below 20% means the cat is working. Above 80% means it's gone. Anywhere in between often points to a bad downstream sensor or exhaust leak rather than the cat itself, the exact trap that costs DIYers $1,800 on a part they didn't need.

Top causes, ranked by likelihood

68% Most Likely
Failed catalytic converter
Converter substrate has broken down internally. Honeycomb physically degraded or poisoned by oil/coolant burning through the engine. Common after 100k miles on most cars, sooner if the car has burned oil or run rich for years.
Part$200–$1,400
Labor$100–$300
DIYMedium
🛒 Shop universal catalytic converters →
22% Check First
Faulty downstream O2 sensor
The rear O2 sensor is reading incorrectly, making the ECU think the cat is failing when it might be fine. Only fixes P0420 about 1 in 5 times, but it's the cheapest test to run. Always look at the live waveform (above) before assuming the sensor is bad.
Part$30–$120
Labor$50–$100
DIYEasy
🛒 Shop downstream O2 sensors →
10% Less Common
Exhaust leak before the converter
A manifold crack, flex pipe blowout, or gasket leak introduces extra oxygen into the stream, confusing the O2 sensors and triggering a false P0420. Listen for a ticking noise on cold start. Often misdiagnosed as a bad cat.
Part$20–$150
Labor$80–$250
DIYHard
🛒 Shop exhaust repair kits →

The #1 money mistake

Don't just swap the downstream O2 sensor on a hunch. Shop techs say this is the most expensive guess on the entire P0420 list. You spend $80 on a sensor that only fixes the problem about 20% of the time, the code comes back, and you're now $80 deeper into a $1,800 catalytic converter you still need. Run the O2 voltage test above before buying anything. If you don't have a scan tool that shows live data, getting one is the single highest-ROI move you can make.
🛒 Shop OBD2 scanners with live O2 data →

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Is it safe to drive?

Short-term: yes. P0420 is not an immediate safety hazard. Your car will run normally. But driving for weeks or months without repair risks damaging the downstream O2 sensors and other emissions components, and the vehicle will fail emissions inspection with this code active. Plan to diagnose and repair within 2–4 weeks.

Note on clearing the code: after repair, the cat monitor needs a full drive cycle (highway driving with warm engine for 15–20 minutes) before the code will officially clear. Don't panic if it lingers for a day after the fix.

What it feels like while driving

Honest answer: usually nothing. That's what makes P0420 so easy to ignore, and how a $150 sensor fix turns into a $1,800 converter replacement.

Most Common · 70%+
No symptoms at all
Car runs perfectly. The only sign is the check engine light. The converter is slowly losing efficiency, not failed completely yet.
Sometimes Present
Slight power loss under load
A partially clogged cat restricts exhaust flow. Engine feels lazy merging onto the highway or climbing hills. Not dramatic, but noticeable to the driver.
Advanced Stage
Rotten egg smell + rough idle
Sulfur smell from the exhaust usually means the cat is damaged or the upstream O2 sensor is misfiring and dumping raw fuel through. At this stage, repair is urgent.

Most affected vehicles

VehicleFrequencyAvg costMileage
Toyota Camry (2002–2011)Very High$65085k–140k
Toyota Corolla (2003–2013)Very High$60090k–160k
Honda Accord (2003–2012)High$70080k–130k
Chevy Silverado 5.3L (2005–2015)High$95075k–120k
Ford Escape (2008–2014)Moderate$85070k–110k
Subaru Outback (2005–2012)Moderate$1,10060k–100k

Heads up on Bank 1: on transverse FWD V6s (Camry, Accord, Odyssey), Bank 1 is the bank with cylinder #1, often the firewall or rear side, not the driver side. Check your service info before going under the car.

Diagnosis steps

  1. Scan the code and rule out misfires first
    Pull all stored codes. If P0300–P0308 (misfires) are present alongside P0420, fix the misfires first. Driving with misfires dumps raw fuel through the cat and will destroy a brand-new one.
  2. Pull freeze frame, check the O2 voltage relationship
    Run the live-data test from section 02. Downstream switch ratio under 20% means cat is fine, look at sensors or leaks. Over 80% means cat is dead. Between 20–80% usually means an exhaust leak or weak sensor giving a false trigger.
  3. Check fuel trims for upstream root causes
    Long-term fuel trims over +10% mean the engine is running lean, which kills cats. Under -10% means rich, which also kills cats. Fix the underlying issue or the new cat will fail in 6 months.
Steps 4+ are specific to your exact vehicle
04 → Torque specs for your engine's exhaust bolts
05 → Connector pinouts for your O2 sensors
06 → Live-data target values for your year/make
07 → OEM part numbers that fit without guesswork
08 → CARB vs federal cat compliance (CA, NY, CO, ME)
→ Get steps for your exact vehicle ($5.99)

P0420 vs P0430

Both codes flag catalytic converter efficiency, but on different exhaust banks. Common to see them together on V6 and V8 engines.

AttributeP0420P0430
BankBank 1 (cylinder #1 side)Bank 2 (opposite bank)
EnginesAll gas enginesV6 and V8 only
Repair cost$50–$2,400$50–$2,400
Both at once?Yes, GM 5.3L V8s commonly throw both together (AFM oil consumption poisons both cats)

Community reports

ResolvedMarcusK, Pittsburgh · 2013 Toyota Camry · 112,000 mi
P0420 came on at 112k. One shop wanted $1,800 for a new cat, the other tested the O2 sensor first and found it reading flat. $65 sensor from RockAuto, 20-minute job. Code cleared and hasn't come back. Always test the sensor first.
ResolvedSarahR, Denver · 2007 Honda Accord · 98,000 mi
P0420 plus a faint burning smell. Cracked exhaust manifold gasket leaking onto the cat. Replaced the gasket for $180. 1,000 miles later, no return. Saved me from a $1,200 converter.
ResolvedJeffL, Orlando · 2009 Chevy Silverado 5.3L · 141,000 mi
Silverado was burning oil from AFM lifter issues. Poisoned both cats. $2,800 total. If you have a GM 5.3L throwing P0420 + P0430, check oil consumption first, the cats are a symptom.
ResolvedTinaM, Seattle · 2011 Subaru Outback · 88,000 mi
Dealer wanted $1,400 for an OEM cat. Ran AmpAuto diagnosis first, it flagged the downstream O2 sensor based on my freeze frame data. $78 sensor. Code hasn't returned in 4 months. Saved $1,300+.
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