Car Shakes When Accelerating
Common causes, likely diagnostic paths, OBD references, and repair-next steps when the car shakes under acceleration.
A shake on acceleration often points to a load-related misfire, lean fuel delivery problem, or airflow fault when the engine is asked to make power. If the shake comes with hesitation, a flashing check engine light, or a stored misfire code, engine-performance diagnosis should come before guessing at parts.
Common Sounds or Signs
- Shudder or shake that gets worse with throttle
- Stumble or bucking under moderate to heavy load
- Flashing check engine light during acceleration
- Loss of smooth power as RPM climbs
Quick Checks
- Scan for P0300 through P0304, lean-condition codes, and airflow-performance codes
- Note whether the shake happens only under load or also at idle
- Inspect spark plugs and coils before moving deeper into fuel or catalyst faults
- Check fuel trims and fuel delivery if the shake gets worse climbing hills or under heavier throttle
- Inspect intake ducting and MAF-related connections if hesitation is paired with airflow codes
Inspection Priority
- Confirm the symptom, code, or inspection evidence before replacement.
- Check related systems when the failure pattern is not isolated.
Common Causes
- Ignition misfire under load
- Weak fuel delivery or injector fault
- Contaminated or inaccurate MAF signal
- Lean condition from intake or vacuum leak
- Catalyst restriction or exhaust backpressure problem in some cases
Likely Diagnostic Paths
- If the shake comes with a flashing MIL or clear cylinder-drop feel, start with misfire diagnosis before chasing sensors.
- If the engine goes lean under load, fuel pump output and shared fuel-delivery issues move higher on the list.
- If power falls off without a strong misfire but airflow data looks implausible, verify the MAF path before replacing ignition parts.
Diagnostic Path
Pick the first inspection path.
Misfire Under Load Path
Use misfire counters and ignition checks first when vibration appears with throttle demand.
- Check P0300-family codes and freeze-frame load
- Inspect plugs, coils, and coil boots
- Confirm whether the shake follows a cylinder or affects multiple cylinders
Fuel and Airflow Path
If the shake is tied to hills, highway speed, or lean trims, fuel delivery and airflow move up.
- Review fuel trims under load
- Check fuel pressure or volume when power falls off
- Inspect intake ducting and MAF signal plausibility
Common Next Steps
Quick checks before expanding the estimate.
Inspect ignition coils
Check coil boots, carbon tracking, and whether the miss follows a swap.
Check spark plugs
Inspect gap, fouling, wear, oil, coolant, and plug-well condition.
Verify injector operation
Move to injector balance, pulse, or leak-down checks if the misfire stays.
Check compression if needed
Use compression or leak-down testing when spark and fuel checks do not move the fault.
Related Inspection
Recommended Next Repair Paths
Compare repair paths before replacing parts.
Spark Plug Replacement Cost
A strong first repair path when the shake is tied to worn plugs or load-related spark breakdown.
Ignition Coil Replacement Cost
Relevant when the shake follows a weak coil or gets noticeably worse as cylinder demand rises.
Fuel Pump Replacement Cost
A useful next path when acceleration load exposes weak pressure or volume delivery.
Mass Air Flow Sensor Replacement Cost
Worth pricing when hesitation and shake line up with biased airflow data or contamination.
Catalytic Converter Replacement Cost
Only use this path after misfire and fueling causes are checked if power loss suggests restriction.
Explore Related Systems
Use when multiple systems overlap.