P0442 - Evaporative Emission Control System Leak Detected (Small Leak)
P0442 means the EVAP system detected a small leak during its self-test. A weak gas cap seal is common, but this is not automatically just a bad gas cap; small hose cracks, loose fittings, purge or vent valve sealing issues, canister seepage, or line seepage can 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.
EVAP Small Leak Diagnostic Path
Use smoke testing and vent/purge checks to locate small leaks before pricing EVAP parts.
Inspection Priority
- Smoke test the EVAP system
- Inspect cap, filler neck, and hose connections
- Command purge and vent valves only after leak location is understood
Estimate Guidance
- Quote smoke testing before purge or vent valve replacement.
- Inspect gas cap seal, filler neck, and small hose connections first.
- Price valves only when sealing or command tests support them.
Code Overview
P0442 means the EVAP system detected a small leak during its self-test. A weak gas cap seal is common, but this is not automatically just a bad gas cap; small hose cracks, loose fittings, purge or vent valve sealing issues, canister seepage, or line seepage can set the same code.
Common Causes
- Loose or weak-sealing gas cap
- Small crack or loose connection in an EVAP hose
- Canister vent or purge valve not sealing completely
Symptoms
- Check-engine light with no major drivability complaint
- Usually no noticeable change in how the vehicle runs
- Readiness monitor or emissions test failure
Diagnostic Steps
- Inspect the gas cap seal and make sure the cap tightens correctly
- Inspect EVAP lines near the canister and tank for small cracks or loose fittings
- Verify the purge and vent valves seal when commanded closed
- Run a smoke test if the leak is not obvious during inspection
Diagnostic Insight
P0442 should be treated as a small EVAP leak until testing shows whether the leak is at the cap, hose, valve, canister, or line.
- Small leaks can be harder to find than large leaks and often need smoke testing to confirm the source.
- A loose or aging gas cap is a good first check, but valve sealing and line seepage should not be skipped.
- If P0455 or P0446 are also present, use those codes to narrow leak size, vent behavior, or valve-control direction.
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.
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.