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DTC/P0420·Honda

P0420 on Honda: Causes, Symptoms and Fix Cost

Quick Answer
Moderate SeveritySafe to drive (short-term)Honda

P0420 on a Honda means the catalytic converter on Bank 1 (the engine side with cylinder 1) is no longer cleaning the exhaust efficiently enough, based on the computer comparing the oxygen sensors before and after it. The most common cause is a worn, aged catalytic converter. Usually there are no driveability symptoms beyond the warning light and slightly worse economy, but the car will fail emissions or TUV. A converter replacement typically costs 400 to 1800 EUR or more.

Repair cost on Honda90 - €1620

What does P0420 mean on a Honda?

P0420 means the catalytic converter on Bank 1 (the engine side with cylinder 1) is no longer cleaning the exhaust efficiently enough, based on the computer comparing the oxygen sensors before and after it. The most common cause is a worn, aged catalytic converter. Usually there are no driveability symptoms beyond the warning light and slightly worse economy, but the car will fail emissions or TUV. A converter replacement typically costs 400 to 1800 EUR or more.

Honda Civic

2006-2024

On 2006-2011 Civics with the R18A engine, P0420 is frequently caused by a tired rear oxygen sensor rather than the converter itself, so test the downstream O2 sensor first before committing to a converter. Exhaust manifold cracking on earlier models can also pull in air and trigger the code.

What causes P0420 on a Honda?

Beyond the generic causes listed on the main P0420 page, these are the Honda-specific patterns we see most often:

Honda CivicRear O2 sensor degradation common on R18A engines
Honda CivicExhaust manifold cracking on 2006-2009 models drawing in air

How to diagnose P0420 on a Honda with OBD2

Follow these steps to pinpoint the root cause of P0420:

  1. Read freeze frame data to see the engine load, temperature and fuel trims when the code was stored
  2. Scan for other codes first, misfire (P0300 series), O2 sensor or fuel-trim codes usually point to the real root cause and should be fixed before touching the converter
  3. Inspect the exhaust from the manifold back, look and listen for leaks at gaskets, flex pipes and welds before and around the converter
  4. Watch live O2 sensor data, the upstream sensor should swing rapidly while a healthy downstream sensor stays nearly flat
  5. Compare upstream versus downstream waveforms, if the downstream sensor swings almost as much as the upstream one, the converter is failing
  6. Check fuel trims and the MAF reading, rule out a rich or lean condition or a dirty MAF that could be contaminating the converter
  7. Clear the code and complete a drive cycle, confirm whether it returns and re-test catalyst monitor readiness

How much does P0420 cost to fix on a Honda? (EUR)

Estimated repair costs on a Honda (Honda parts and labour typically run 10% below the average for this code).

Repair Parts Cost Labor Cost Total Estimate DIY Difficulty
Replace catalytic converter €270–€1350 €90–€270 €360–€1620 Professional
Replace downstream O2 sensor €45–€135 €54–€108 €99–€243 Moderate
Fix exhaust leak €18–€90 €72–€180 €90–€270 Moderate

Prices estimated as of May 2026. Costs vary by region, vehicle, and shop.

These codes commonly cluster with P0420 on Honda vehicles:

FAQ: P0420 on Honda

What does the P0420 code mean?

P0420 stands for Catalyst System Efficiency Below Threshold (Bank 1). The engine computer compares the oxygen sensors before and after the catalytic converter and has decided the converter on Bank 1 is no longer cleaning the exhaust efficiently enough. Bank 1 is the side of the engine that contains cylinder 1. The most common reason is a worn-out catalytic converter.

What are the symptoms of P0420?

Usually the only symptom is the check engine light, plus slightly worse fuel economy. Some drivers notice a faint sulfur or rotten-egg smell. The car normally drives the same, but it will fail an emissions or TUV test, and a badly clogged converter can cause sluggish acceleration.

What causes a P0420 code?

The leading cause is an aged catalytic converter whose internal coating has worn out. Other causes include a lazy downstream O2 sensor that starts reading like the upstream one, an exhaust leak before the converter that skews sensor readings, a misfire or rich-running condition that overheats and damages the converter, and a dirty MAF sensor throwing off fuel trims.

Is it safe to drive with a P0420 code?

Yes, for the short term it is generally safe because the car still runs normally. The catch is that if the underlying cause is a misfire or rich running, continued driving can finish off the converter. You should also expect to fail any emissions or TUV inspection until the code is fixed, so do not leave it unresolved for long.

How do you fix and clear a P0420 code?

Fix the actual cause first. Test the downstream O2 sensor and check for exhaust leaks and misfires before assuming the converter is dead, since those are far cheaper. If the converter itself has failed, it must be replaced. After the repair the code can be cleared with a scan tool, then a full drive cycle lets the catalyst monitor re-run and confirm the fix held.

How much does it cost to fix P0420?

It depends on the cause. A downstream O2 sensor is usually 50 to 200 EUR fitted. Repairing an exhaust leak is often around 100 to 300 EUR. Replacing the catalytic converter is the expensive one, typically 400 to 1800 EUR or more, and higher again on cars where the converter is built into the exhaust manifold.

Looking for the full P0420 reference (all makes, full diagnosis flow, complete repair cost matrix)?

See the main P0420 guide
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