Can you keep driving?
Can you keep driving?
Stop driving if any of these apply
- !The engine starts running much worse, overheating begins, or the warning light flashes.
- !The fault is paired with limp mode, strong power loss, or another symptom that suggests a bigger system problem.
What to check first
Step-by-step checks
- 1
Safety first
Let the exhaust cool before touching the sensor, tubing, or nearby heat shielding
- 2
Free - no tools
Check whether the code is the only one stored or whether it appears with boost, DPF, EGR, or turbo-related codes
- 3
Basic tool needed
Inspect the exhaust pressure sensor connector and tubing for heat damage, blockage, looseness, or corrosion
- 4
Basic tool needed
Verify that the pressure line or port is not plugged with soot or moisture
- 5
Basic tool needed
If scan data is available, compare the pressure reading with engine load and key-on engine-off behavior
If the code returns
- -If the reading is flat or implausible, wiring or the sensor itself moves higher on the list.
- -If the tubing or port is restricted, clear that before replacing the sensor.
- -If the code returns after connector repair, look deeper at the pressure circuit and its reference side.
Background
What this code means
P0477 is a generic OBD-II exhaust pressure or exhaust pressure control code.
A low reading can come from a stuck valve, a wiring fault, or a valve that is not reaching the expected response point.
Reduced power or a diesel-exhaust fault may appear with it, but the vehicle may still drive normally at first.
Diagnosis
Common causes
Failed exhaust pressure sensor
The sensor can drift or stop reporting a believable pressure value.
Soot-blocked pressure line or port
Restricted tubing can make the sensor look wrong even when it is not.
Connector or harness damage
Heat, vibration, and corrosion can interrupt the signal or reference circuit.
Exhaust-side control issue
A broader exhaust-pressure problem can show up as a circuit fault.
Avoid these mistakes
What not to do
- xDo not replace the sensor or control part before checking the connector, wiring, and the actual system behavior.
- xDo not ignore a flashing light, overheating, or major drivability change while chasing a sensor code.
Parts
Parts that may need replacing
See also
Related OBD codes
Source notes
Generic OBD-II (SAE J1979 / ISO 15031-5). These codes were seeded from dtcdb and then expanded around common exhaust pressure sensor and exhaust pressure control valve 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. Exact diagnosis and repair steps vary by make, engine family, and model year.
Last reviewed: 2026-04-10
Reference: Open reference