P0430 - Catalyst System Efficiency Below Threshold (Bank 2)
P0430 means catalyst efficiency on bank 2 tested below the expected threshold after the ECM compared upstream and downstream oxygen sensor behavior. It is not automatically a bad catalytic converter; exhaust leaks, biased or slow oxygen sensor data, unresolved misfires, rich/lean operation, or other fueling problems can set the same code or damage catalyst performance.
Treat the code as the starting point: compare symptoms, likely causes, and repair paths before pricing parts or moving into an estimate.
Catalyst Efficiency Diagnostic Path
Confirm converter efficiency only after checking O2 data, exhaust leaks, misfires, and rich-running causes.
Inspection Priority
- Inspect exhaust leaks before and near the converter
- Compare upstream and downstream O2 sensor patterns
- Check misfire, fuel trim, and rich-running evidence before replacing the converter
Code Overview
P0430 means catalyst efficiency on bank 2 tested below the expected threshold after the ECM compared upstream and downstream oxygen sensor behavior. It is not automatically a bad catalytic converter; exhaust leaks, biased or slow oxygen sensor data, unresolved misfires, rich/lean operation, or other fueling problems can set the same code or damage catalyst performance.
Common Causes
- Toyota Camry: aging catalytic converters, upstream air/fuel sensor issues, and unresolved fuel-control faults are common catalyst-code starting points.
- Ford F-150: exhaust leaks near the manifolds, aging converters, and converter efficiency failures are common P0420/P0430 causes.
- Chevy Silverado: misfire damage, rich-running conditions, and converter overheating often trigger catalyst efficiency codes.
- Honda Accord: aging converters, upstream or downstream O2 sensor performance issues, and fuel-control problems are frequent catalyst-code causes.
Symptoms
- Often no clear drivability complaint
- Failed emissions readiness or inspection
- Sulfur smell or power loss if the converter is restricted
Diagnostic Steps
- Compare upstream and downstream O2 or air/fuel sensor activity after the engine is fully warm and in closed loop.
- If the rear O2 sensor waveform closely follows the front sensor, catalyst oxygen storage is weak and converter efficiency becomes more likely.
- If there is recent misfire history, inspect ignition, injector, compression, and fuel faults before replacing the converter.
- If there is sulfur smell, excessive converter heat, or glowing converter symptoms, inspect for rich-running, leaking injectors, or fuel-control faults.
- If the engine burns oil or consumes coolant, inspect for converter contamination risk before condemning the catalyst alone.
- If both catalyst codes appear with fuel-trim, rich, lean, or MAF codes, diagnose the upstream fuel-control issue before calling both converters failed.
Diagnostic Insight
P0430 should be diagnosed by comparing catalyst monitor data with upstream engine health before the bank 2 converter is condemned.
- If the downstream O2 sensor on bank 2 mirrors the upstream sensor after warm-up, weak catalyst oxygen storage becomes more likely.
- Recent misfire, rich-running, lean-running, or fuel-trim history should be corrected first because those faults can damage the converter or create a false efficiency failure.
- Exhaust leaks ahead of or near the bank 2 converter can pull oxygen into the stream and make catalyst data look worse than the converter really is.
- Oil burning, coolant consumption, or fuel contamination can poison the catalyst, so converter replacement without fixing the source can lead to repeat failure.
Repair Difficulty
Advanced
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.
Estimator-ready next step after the fault path is confirmed.
Estimator-ready next step after the fault path is confirmed.
Estimator-ready next step after the fault path is confirmed.
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.