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High Fuel Consumption – Causes, Diagnosis and How to Fix

If your car suddenly uses more fuel than normal, the issue is usually related to air‑fuel mixture problems, sensor faults, ignition misfires or fuel system inefficiency. This premium guide explains the most common causes and gives you a step‑by‑step diagnostic process to identify the problem accurately.

Symptoms of High Fuel Consumption

  • Noticeably reduced MPG or range
  • Strong fuel smell
  • Rough idle or hesitation
  • Black smoke from exhaust
  • Check Engine Light may be on
  • Poor acceleration

Main Causes

  • Dirty or failing MAF sensor
  • Faulty O2 sensor (stuck rich)
  • Leaking or clogged fuel injectors
  • Low tire pressure or wheel alignment issues
  • Ignition misfires
  • Vacuum leaks causing incorrect fuel trims
  • Weak fuel pump or incorrect fuel pressure
  • Dirty air filter

Step‑by‑Step Diagnosis

1. Scan for Fault Codes

Use an OBD2 scanner to check for mixture, misfire or sensor‑related codes. Common codes include P0172, P0175, P0101 and P2196.

2. Inspect the MAF Sensor

A dirty MAF sensor can cause incorrect air‑fuel calculations, leading to rich mixture and high fuel consumption. Clean with MAF‑safe cleaner.

3. Check O2 Sensors

A faulty O2 sensor stuck rich causes the ECU to inject more fuel than needed. Look for codes such as P2196 or P2198.

4. Inspect Fuel Injectors

Leaking injectors cause rich mixture and fuel smell. Clogged injectors reduce efficiency and cause misfires.

5. Fuel Pressure Test

Incorrect fuel pressure can cause both rich and lean conditions. Compare measured pressure to manufacturer specifications.

6. Check for Misfires

Misfires waste fuel and reduce engine efficiency. Inspect spark plugs, coils and injectors.

7. Tire Pressure and Alignment

Low tire pressure or poor alignment increases rolling resistance and fuel consumption.

8. Air Filter Inspection

A clogged air filter restricts airflow, causing rich mixture and poor fuel economy.

Relevant Fault Codes

Recommended OBD2 Scanner

To diagnose high fuel consumption accurately, you need an OBD2 scanner that can read fuel trims, O2 sensor data, MAF readings and misfire counters. This helps identify whether the issue is caused by rich mixture, sensor faults or ignition problems.

See our recommended tools and choose the right scanner for your vehicle:

View OBD2 Scanners →

When to Seek Professional Help

  • Fuel trims extremely negative (rich condition)
  • Strong fuel smell from exhaust
  • Persistent rich codes
  • Fuel pressure outside specification
  • Multiple misfire codes
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