Can you keep driving?
Can you keep driving?
Stop driving if any of these apply
- !The engine starts running much worse, stalls, or the warning light flashes.
- !The vehicle loses power sharply or the electrical system is acting unstable while the code is active.
What to check first
Step-by-step checks
- 1
Free - no tools
Check whether the cruise buttons are sticky, slow to respond, or affected by steering-wheel movement
- 2
Free - no tools
Inspect the connector or clock-spring area if the vehicle uses wheel-mounted controls
- 3
Basic tool needed
See whether the cruise system is the only thing affected or whether other switch functions also act oddly
- 4
Basic tool needed
If the code appeared after steering-column work, confirm the wiring and connector seating first
- 5
Basic tool needed
If scan data is available, watch the cruise input change while pressing the switch
If the code returns
- -If the input changes only sometimes, the switch or clock spring moves higher on the list.
- -If the code returns after connector repair, check the switch circuit and ground path again.
- -If other steering-wheel buttons fail too, the shared control circuit is more likely than the cruise switch alone.
Background
What this code means
P0569 is a generic OBD-II cruise-control input code.
The ECU is not seeing the coast signal the way it expects, which can come from the switch, wiring, or steering-wheel control circuit.
This is usually more of a control-input fault than a powertrain problem.
Diagnosis
Common causes
Cruise switch failure
The button or stalk may not be sending the coast signal correctly.
Clock spring or steering-wheel wiring issue
A rotating harness fault can interrupt the input signal.
Connector or wiring issue
A loose or corroded connection can stop the signal from reaching the ECU.
Shared control module fault
The body or cruise module may not be reading the switch correctly.
Avoid these mistakes
What not to do
- xDo not replace parts before checking the battery, connectors, fuses, and switch inputs that feed the circuit.
- xDo not ignore drivability changes just because the code sounds like a switch or voltage issue.
Parts
Parts that may need replacing
See also
Related OBD codes
Source notes
Generic OBD-II (SAE J1979 / ISO 15031-5). P0569 was expanded around common cruise-coast input faults, including switch, wiring, and steering-column circuit 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