Rough Idle
Common causes, likely diagnostic paths, OBD references, and repair-next steps for rough idle complaints.
Use the symptom as the starting point, then confirm likely causes with checks, OBD context, and repair guides before estimating or replacing parts.
Rough idle usually means combustion quality or airflow control is unstable at low RPM. The quickest separation is whether the engine is misfiring, running lean, or idling poorly because extra air is getting in or the throttle is not settling correctly.
Common Sounds or Signs
- Shaking or vibration while stopped
- Idle speed dips, hunts, or feels uneven
- Light stumble when shifting into gear
- Uneven exhaust note at idle
Quick Checks
- Scan for pending misfire, lean-condition, or high-idle codes before replacing parts
- Watch fuel trims and idle speed data at hot idle
- Inspect intake ducting, PCV plumbing, and vacuum hoses after the MAF
- Inspect spark plugs and ignition coils if the engine has a clear cylinder-drop feel
- Inspect the throttle body for carbon buildup or sticking
Inspection Priority
- Inspect ignition components first when misfire evidence is present.
- Verify fuel trim behavior before replacing parts.
- Check for vacuum leaks when misfires are random or lean-related.
Common Causes
- Vacuum leak after the mass air flow sensor
- Dirty or sticking throttle body
- Worn spark plugs or weak ignition coils
- Contaminated or inaccurate MAF signal
- PCV leak or intake gasket leak
Likely Diagnostic Paths
- If idle speed hangs high or fuel trims climb lean at idle, inspect for vacuum leaks and throttle-body issues first.
- If the engine feels like one cylinder is dropping out, start with misfire codes and ignition or injector checks.
- If airflow and fuel-trim data look implausible together, verify the MAF signal before replacing parts.
Diagnostic Path
Use these paths to decide what to inspect first, what failures overlap, and when the repair is ready to estimate.
Air Leak and Idle Control Path
Use fuel trims, smoke testing, and throttle behavior to separate vacuum leaks from throttle or MAF problems.
- Inspect intake ducting, PCV hoses, and vacuum lines
- Compare fuel trims at idle and light throttle
- Check throttle body condition before quoting replacement
Misfire Path
When rough idle feels like a cylinder drop, prove spark, injector, or compression before estimating parts.
- Check P0300-family codes and misfire counters
- Inspect spark plugs, coils, and injector connector fit
- Use compression testing when the same cylinder stays weak
Related OBD Codes
Move into code lookup when a scan tool confirms one of these faults, then use the code page to separate misfire, lean, EVAP, cooling, or charging causes before pricing the repair.
Recommended Next Repair Paths
Compare likely repair paths before replacing parts. Cost guides and estimates are strongest after symptoms, checks, code evidence, and repair-guide logic point in the same direction.
Throttle Body Replacement Cost
A strong next path when idle control stays unstable after inspection, cleaning, and relearn checks.
Mass Air Flow Sensor Replacement Cost
Relevant when scan data and intake inspection point to biased airflow readings.
PCV Valve Replacement Cost
Useful when crankcase ventilation is pulling in unmetered air and upsetting idle quality.
Intake Manifold Gasket Replacement Cost
A practical next path when smoke testing or bank-side leak checks point to an intake sealing problem.
Spark Plug Replacement Cost
Worth pricing when rough idle is tied to worn plugs, weak spark, or overdue tune-up history.
Diagnostic Tools
Use TorqueMech diagnostic flow to move from symptom checking into code context, likely causes, and repair guide confirmation.
Open Diagnostic Tools →Need a Quick Estimate?
Open the estimator when the likely repair path is known and you are ready to compare labor, parts, and customer-ready quote context.
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