P0430 means the catalytic converter on Bank 2 (the engine bank that does not contain cylinder 1, found on V6, V8, and boxer engines) is no longer cleaning exhaust gases efficiently. The ECU detects this by comparing the upstream and downstream oxygen sensors: a healthy converter keeps the rear sensor steady, a worn one lets it swing. The most common cause is a worn-out converter, typically after 150,000 km, costing 400 to 1800 EUR to replace.
P0430 on Toyota: Causes, Symptoms and Fix Cost
P0430 on a Toyota means the catalytic converter on Bank 2 (the engine bank that does not contain cylinder 1, found on V6, V8, and boxer engines) is no longer cleaning exhaust gases efficiently. The ECU detects this by comparing the upstream and downstream oxygen sensors: a healthy converter keeps the rear sensor steady, a worn one lets it swing. The most common cause is a worn-out converter, typically after 150,000 km, costing 400 to 1800 EUR to replace.
What does P0430 mean on a Toyota?
Toyota Camry
2007-2024P0430 on the Camry V6 (2GR-FE) usually means the Bank 2 converter has reached end of life at 150,000 km or more. On the 2GR-FE the Bank 2 converter is on the firewall side, so access is more labour-intensive than Bank 1. Four-cylinder Camrys are single-bank and will not throw P0430. Toyota OEM converters are recommended for longevity and to reliably pass the catalyst monitor.
What causes P0430 on a Toyota?
Beyond the generic causes listed on the main P0430 page, these are the Toyota-specific patterns we see most often:
How to diagnose P0430 on a Toyota with OBD2
Follow these steps to pinpoint the root cause of P0430:
- Check for companion codes first (misfires, lean/rich trims, O2 heater faults). Fix those before P0430, as the catalyst code is often secondary to a misfire or fuel-mixture problem
- Graph the Bank 2 upstream and downstream O2 sensors at steady cruise (2,000 to 2,500 RPM). The upstream sensor should oscillate 0.1 to 0.9V rapidly. The downstream should stay fairly flat around 0.4 to 0.6V on a healthy converter
- If the downstream sensor mirrors the upstream oscillations, the converter is no longer storing oxygen and is likely failing
- Test the downstream O2 sensor response. If switching lean-to-rich or rich-to-lean takes over 300ms, the sensor itself is sluggish and may be the real cause rather than the converter
- Inspect the Bank 2 exhaust manifold, converter flanges, and piping for leaks. Listen for ticking or hissing on a cold start and check for soot around joints
- On high-mileage engines, check oil consumption and look for coolant loss. Burning oil or coolant contaminates the converter and will quickly kill a new one if not addressed
- Confirm you are working on the correct bank: Bank 2 is the side that does NOT contain cylinder 1. Verify cylinder 1 location in the service manual before condemning a converter
How much does P0430 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 P0430 on Toyota
These codes commonly cluster with P0430 on Toyota vehicles:
FAQ: P0430 on Toyota
What does the P0430 code mean?
P0430 means Catalyst System Efficiency Below Threshold (Bank 2). The catalytic converter on the engine bank that does not contain cylinder 1 is no longer converting exhaust gases efficiently. The ECU works this out by comparing the upstream and downstream oxygen sensor signals on Bank 2. It is the same fault as P0420, just on the opposite cylinder bank, so it only appears on V6, V8, and boxer engines.
What are the symptoms of P0430?
Most of the time the only symptom is the check engine light. You may notice a small drop in fuel economy, a sulfur or rotten-egg smell from the exhaust, or slightly sluggish acceleration. In advanced cases the converter's internal substrate breaks apart and you hear a rattle from underneath the car. The code will also cause an emissions or inspection failure.
What causes a P0430 code?
The most common cause is a worn-out Bank 2 catalytic converter, usually after about 150,000 km. Other causes include a sluggish downstream oxygen sensor, an engine misfire dumping fuel into the converter, a rich-running fuel mixture, an exhaust leak near the converter, or oil and coolant contamination from worn seals or a head gasket. Always rule out a bad O2 sensor before replacing the converter.
Is it safe to drive with a P0430 code?
Yes, it is generally safe to keep driving. There is no risk of sudden failure, and the practical effects are higher emissions and a failed inspection. The one exception is if P0430 appears alongside misfire codes: in that case the unburned fuel can overheat and destroy the converter, so the misfire should be fixed without delay.
How much does it cost to fix P0430?
If the cause is the downstream Bank 2 oxygen sensor, expect roughly 50 to 200 EUR including labour. If the catalytic converter needs replacing, a standard unit runs about 400 to 1800 EUR or more depending on the vehicle, and integrated manifold-style converters sit at the top of that range. Fixing an exhaust leak is cheaper, often 100 to 300 EUR.
Which bank is Bank 2 and can I just clear the code?
Bank 2 is the cylinder bank that does NOT contain cylinder 1, so confirm cylinder 1's location in your service manual before condemning a converter. Clearing the code is possible but it returns within 1 to 3 drive cycles if the root cause remains, because the ECU re-runs the catalyst efficiency test automatically. Clearing it before an emissions test does not help, as the readiness monitors need time to complete.
Looking for the full P0430 reference (all makes, full diagnosis flow, complete repair cost matrix)?
See the main P0430 guideDiagnosing P0430 on your Toyota?
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