Can you keep driving?
Can you keep driving?
Stop driving if any of these apply
- !The engine starts misfiring badly, stalling, or losing power sharply.
- !The check-engine light flashes or the vehicle runs rough enough to risk catalyst damage.
What to check first
Step-by-step checks
- 1
Free - no tools
Check whether P0290 appears with misfire or fuel-trim codes
- 2
Free - no tools
Inspect the injector and ignition connectors on cylinder 10 for looseness or damage
- 3
Basic tool needed
Compare scan data for cylinder contribution across nearby cylinders
- 4
Basic tool needed
Notice whether the problem is worse at idle or under load
- 5
Basic tool needed
If the engine has a known mechanical issue, treat it as a leading clue
If the code returns
- -If ignition swap tests move the fault, focus on ignition parts first.
- -If injector testing points to fuel delivery trouble, focus there before buying more parts.
- -If the code returns after repair, repeat the balance check before assuming another cylinder is at fault.
Background
What this code means
P0290 is a generic OBD-II code for cylinder 10 contribution or balance fault.
It points to a cylinder that is not contributing the power the engine computer expects, which can be caused by fuel, spark, or compression problems.
Diagnosis
Common causes
Weak spark on cylinder 10
A plug, coil, or wire issue can reduce that cylinder's output.
Injector imbalance
A weak or restricted injector can make the cylinder contribute less than the others.
Compression problem
A mechanical issue can keep the cylinder from making normal power.
Connector or wiring fault
A poor connection can interrupt the injector or ignition circuit.
Avoid these mistakes
What not to do
- xDo not replace injectors as a set before checking for wiring, fuel pressure, or a mechanical cylinder issue.
- xDo not ignore drivability changes just because the code sounds like an injector balance fault.
Parts
Parts that may need replacing
See also
Related OBD codes
Source notes
Generic OBD-II (SAE J1979 / ISO 15031-5). P0290 was expanded around common cylinder 10 contribution faults, especially ignition weakness, injector imbalance, and compression problems.
This guide is written as a generic multi-make reference, so bulletin history, sensor locations, and repair order can still change by manufacturer and engine family.
This is generic OBD-II guidance and should not override vehicle-specific service information. Exact diagnosis and repair steps vary by make, engine family, and model year.
Last reviewed: 2026-04-10
Reference: Open reference