Generic OBD-II / Powertrain

P0455 - P0455 Usually Means the Evap System Has Detected a Large Leak

P0455 is a generic OBD-II EVAP gross-leak code.

This is a generic OBD-II guide that can apply across many makes. Exact test flow, sensor locations, and repeat failure patterns can still vary by manufacturer and engine family.

Severity

Low

Keep driving?

Often yes

Most likely cause

A loose fuel cap, disconnected EVAP hose, or purge/vent valve issue is the first place to look.

DIY friendly?

Usually yes

First checks take 5 to 15 minutes for the first checks. No special tools are usually needed for the first checks.

Can you keep driving?

Can you keep driving?

Stop driving if any of these apply

  • !The check-engine light is flashing.
  • !The engine is running badly enough that traffic safety or engine damage becomes a concern.
If the light is steady and the vehicle still drives normally: Usually yes, because this is typically an emissions-system leak rather than an immediate drivability fault.

What to check first

Step-by-step checks

  1. 1

    Free - no tools

    Check the fuel cap first and make sure it seals fully

  2. 2

    Free - no tools

    Inspect visible EVAP hoses and lines for splits, disconnections, or obvious damage

  3. 3

    Basic tool needed

    Look for a fuel smell or a code that appeared right after refueling

  4. 4

    Basic tool needed

    If the visual check looks good, use a smoke test or targeted EVAP test instead of guessing

  5. 5

    Basic tool needed

    If related EVAP codes are present, diagnose them together rather than treating P0455 alone

If the code returns

  • -If a cap or hose fix does not hold, the purge and vent side deserves a closer look.
  • -If a smoke test finds the leak, repair the actual leak point before replacing valves at random.
  • -If the code returns with no visible leak, deeper EVAP hardware may still be involved.

Background

What this code means

P0455 is a generic OBD-II EVAP gross-leak code.

Large leaks are often visible or easy to trace, so the fastest path is usually the cap, hoses, and obvious connections before deeper testing.

Diagnosis

Common causes

Most common

Loose or worn fuel cap

A cap that does not seal can set a large-leak code quickly.

Common

Disconnected EVAP hose

A hose left off or split wide open is a classic gross-leak cause.

Common

Purge or vent valve leak

A valve that does not seal can make the system fail its leak test.

Possible

Canister or line damage

A damaged canister or line can leak enough to trigger the code.

Avoid these mistakes

What not to do

  • xDo not replace major parts before checking the simple causes first.
  • xDo not ignore a flashing check-engine light or obvious drivability symptoms.

Parts

Parts that may need replacing

PartTypical costNotes
Fuel cap$15-$40Often the first part to check or replace if the seal looks weak.
EVAP hose repair$15-$120Relevant if a large split or disconnected line is found.
Purge or vent valve$30-$120Worth testing if the leak is not external.

See also

Related OBD codes

Source notes

Generic OBD-II (SAE J1979 / ISO 15031-5). P0455 was expanded around common gross EVAP leak patterns, including cap sealing, disconnected hoses, and purge/vent valve leaks.

  • -This sample page is intentionally calm because many EVAP codes are lower urgency than misfire or overheating faults.

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. EVAP layouts, vent-valve locations, and smoke-test procedures vary by make and model.

Last reviewed: 2026-04-10

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