P0401 means the engine computer detected too little exhaust gas flowing back through the EGR (Exhaust Gas Recirculation) valve into the intake. That recirculated exhaust dilutes the intake charge to lower nitrogen oxide emissions and combustion temperature. By far the most common cause is carbon buildup clogging the EGR valve or passages, especially on diesels and direct-injection petrol engines. A clean usually costs 80 to 200 EUR.
P0401 on Toyota: Causes, Symptoms and Fix Cost
P0401 on a Toyota means the engine computer detected too little exhaust gas flowing back through the EGR (Exhaust Gas Recirculation) valve into the intake. That recirculated exhaust dilutes the intake charge to lower nitrogen oxide emissions and combustion temperature. By far the most common cause is carbon buildup clogging the EGR valve or passages, especially on diesels and direct-injection petrol engines. A clean usually costs 80 to 200 EUR.
What does P0401 mean on a Toyota?
Toyota Camry
2007-2024The Camry's petrol EGR system is simple and reliable, so P0401 is uncommon before about 150,000 km. When it appears it is almost always carbon in the valve or passages, and cleaning the valve and galleries usually fixes it. The valve is reasonably accessible on both the 2AR-FE and 2GR-FE engines, keeping labour low.
What causes P0401 on a Toyota?
Beyond the generic causes listed on the main P0401 page, these are the Toyota-specific patterns we see most often:
How to diagnose P0401 on a Toyota with OBD2
Follow these steps to pinpoint the root cause of P0401:
- Read freeze-frame data and confirm P0401 (flow insufficient) rather than P0402 (flow excessive) or an electrical valve code, since the fix differs
- Remove the EGR valve and inspect for heavy carbon deposits on the pintle and seat, a caked valve that will not seat or open cleanly is the most common finding
- Command the valve open with a scan tool (electronic) or apply vacuum (vacuum-operated), a working valve makes the engine stumble or stall as exhaust floods the intake
- If the valve opens correctly, probe the EGR passages and intake manifold galleries for carbon blockage that restricts flow downstream of the valve
- On DPFE-equipped vehicles (many Fords), test the DPFE sensor and its two rubber hoses for cracks, blockage, or swapped connections that skew the flow reading
- On diesel engines, inspect the EGR cooler for soot blockage or internal coolant leaks, and check vacuum supply hoses on any vacuum-operated system for cracks or disconnection
- Clear the code, drive a full warm-up cycle, and rescan to confirm flow now meets the commanded target before condemning a part
How much does P0401 cost to fix on a Toyota? (EUR)
Estimated repair costs on a Toyota (Toyota costs align with the average for this code across makes).
Prices estimated as of May 2026. Costs vary by region, vehicle, and shop.
Related codes that often appear with P0401 on Toyota
These codes commonly cluster with P0401 on Toyota vehicles:
FAQ: P0401 on Toyota
What does the P0401 code mean?
P0401 is a generic OBD-II code for Exhaust Gas Recirculation flow insufficient. The engine computer commanded the EGR valve to route a measured amount of exhaust gas back into the intake to cut nitrogen oxide emissions, but the actual flow it measured was too low. It points to a restriction or a valve that is not opening enough, not an engine-damage fault.
What are the symptoms of P0401?
Often the only sign is the check engine light. You may also get a slightly rough idle, occasional knock or pinging under load (because less recirculated exhaust raises combustion temperature), mild hesitation, and a guaranteed fail on an emissions test. A few vehicles cut power slightly when an EGR fault is stored.
What causes a P0401 code?
The leading cause is carbon buildup clogging the EGR valve or its passages, which is why diesels and direct-injection petrol engines see it most. Other causes are a stuck or failed EGR valve, blocked galleries in the intake manifold, a faulty EGR position or DPFE sensor giving a wrong flow reading, a cracked vacuum hose on vacuum-operated systems, or a blocked EGR cooler on diesels.
Is it safe to drive with a P0401 code?
Yes, in the short term. The EGR system is purely about emissions and has no effect on engine safety, so you can drive to a workshop. Expect a slightly rougher idle and a failed emissions test, and address it before testing or a long trip. If you also hear persistent knocking under load, ease off the throttle until it is repaired to avoid heat stress.
How do you fix and clear a P0401 code?
Because carbon is the usual culprit, start by removing the EGR valve, soaking it in EGR or carburetor cleaner, and clearing the carbon from the valve and intake passages, then refit it. If the valve is mechanically damaged or the motor has failed, replace it. After the repair, clear the code with a scan tool and drive a full warm-up cycle so the readiness monitor reruns and confirms the fix.
How much does it cost to fix P0401?
A professional EGR clean typically runs 80 to 200 EUR. Replacing the valve costs about 150 to 500 EUR depending on whether the engine is petrol or diesel and how accessible the valve is. A DIY clean costs only 8 to 20 EUR for a can of cleaner. Diesel EGR coolers and integrated valve-cooler assemblies on premium brands push the top of that range higher.
Looking for the full P0401 reference (all makes, full diagnosis flow, complete repair cost matrix)?
See the main P0401 guideDiagnosing P0401 on your Toyota?
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