P0174 - System Too Lean (Bank 2)
P0174 means bank 2 is running lean because the ECM is correcting for too much air, too little fuel, or an airflow signal it cannot trust. It is not automatically a bad oxygen sensor or MAF sensor; vacuum leaks, intake leaks after the MAF, PCV leaks, weak fuel delivery, low MAF reporting, and bank-specific intake sealing problems can all set the same code.
Treat the code as the starting point: compare symptoms, likely causes, and repair paths before pricing parts or moving into an estimate.
Lean Condition Diagnostic Path
Separate vacuum leaks, airflow data, fuel delivery, and exhaust leaks before replacing sensors.
Inspection Priority
- Compare Bank 1 and Bank 2 trims before assuming a bank-only fault
- Smoke test intake, vacuum, and PCV leak paths after the MAF
- Check MAF data and fuel pressure when both banks trend lean
Estimate Guidance
- Quote smoke testing when trims point to unmetered air.
- Use fuel pressure or volume testing before fuel pump replacement.
- Price MAF or O2 sensors only when scan data supports the sensor path.
Code Overview
P0174 means bank 2 is running lean because the ECM is correcting for too much air, too little fuel, or an airflow signal it cannot trust. It is not automatically a bad oxygen sensor or MAF sensor; vacuum leaks, intake leaks after the MAF, PCV leaks, weak fuel delivery, low MAF reporting, and bank-specific intake sealing problems can all set the same code.
Common Causes
- Toyota Camry: intake manifold gasket leaks, cracked intake boots, and MAF contamination are common lean-code starting points.
- Ford F-150: vacuum leaks, PCV hose failures, intake duct leaks, and unmetered air after the MAF are common P0171/P0174 causes.
- Chevy Silverado: intake manifold leaks, dirty MAF sensors, and small vacuum leaks are frequent lean-code triggers.
- Honda Accord: vacuum leaks, intake tube leaks, and fuel-trim imbalance commonly trigger lean codes before an oxygen sensor is at fault.
Symptoms
- Light surge or rough idle
- Hesitation during part-throttle driving
- Lean stumble or weak cold-start behavior
Diagnostic Steps
- Review short- and long-term fuel trims at idle, 2500 RPM, and steady cruise before replacing sensors.
- If rough idle is strongest at idle, inspect vacuum leaks, PCV hoses, intake boots, brake-booster hose, and manifold gasket areas first.
- If the lean condition appears mainly under load, inspect fuel pressure, fuel volume, restricted filters, weak pumps, and injector delivery.
- If P0171 and P0174 appear together, inspect shared intake leaks, MAF contamination, intake duct leaks, PCV faults, and other unmetered air sources.
- If fuel trims are heavily positive at idle but improve with RPM, a vacuum or intake leak is more likely.
- If trims get worse at highway speed or under load, fuel delivery or MAF accuracy becomes more likely than a small vacuum leak.
Diagnostic Insight
P0174 should be diagnosed from fuel-trim behavior first: compare Bank 1 and Bank 2, find when bank 2 goes lean, then decide whether the fault acts like unmetered air, low fuel delivery, bad airflow reporting, or a lean misfire pattern.
- High positive trims at idle that improve with RPM usually point toward a bank 2 vacuum leak, PCV leak, intake manifold gasket leak, or another unmetered-air source.
- Compare Bank 1 and Bank 2 trims before replacing parts: one-bank lean behavior points more toward bank-side intake sealing, while both-bank lean behavior points toward shared airflow or fuel delivery.
- Smoke testing should come before replacing MAF or oxygen-sensor parts when trims look like an idle-heavy intake, PCV, hose, or manifold leak.
- Trims that get worse during cruise, acceleration, or higher RPM point more toward fuel pressure, fuel volume, injector delivery, or MAF under-reporting than a small idle-only leak.
- If P0101, P0113, or suspicious MAF data appears with P0174, inspect unmetered air after the MAF, low MAF g/s readings, connector behavior, and unplug response before pricing a sensor.
- Lean misfire symptoms or P0300 history under load should separate weak fuel delivery from ignition faults before coils, plugs, or injectors are blamed.
- Unresolved lean operation can overheat or damage the catalyst, so P0420/P0430 and converter replacement decisions should wait until fuel trims are corrected.
Repair Difficulty
Moderate
General difficulty estimate for the most common repair path.
Likely Repairs & Cost Guides
Use symptoms, scan data, and quick checks to confirm the likely repair path before pricing parts. The estimator helps compare repair paths before replacing anything unnecessarily.
Start here when bank 2 trims are leaner at idle, smoke testing may reveal intake manifold, PCV, hose, or post-MAF air leaks before parts are replaced.
Price this only after one-bank versus both-bank trims and unmetered air checks are reviewed, then MAF g/s, unplug behavior, contamination, or P0101-style data confirms the sensor.
Move here when trims worsen at higher RPM, acceleration, or load and fuel pressure or volume drop points toward weak fuel delivery.
Use this path when PCV routing or crankcase ventilation is pulling in unmetered air and affecting idle trims more than load trims.
Related OBD Codes
Browse nearby code-family pages when the same fault pattern overlaps across systems, such as misfire, lean fuel trim, EVAP sealing, cooling, or charging faults.
Next Steps
Move from code lookup to diagnosis, then estimate the likely repair only after symptoms, causes, and checks point to the same path.