Generic OBD-II / Powertrain

P0716 - The Input Shaft Speed Sensor Is Reading Outside the Expected Range

P0716 is a generic OBD-II code for input/turbine speed sensor range or performance.

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

Medium

Keep driving?

Usually short trips only

Most likely cause

A bad input speed sensor, wiring fault, or transmission mechanical issue is often the first place to look.

DIY friendly?

Basics first

First checks take 10 minutes for basic 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 vehicle suddenly runs much worse, loses power sharply, or the check-engine light starts flashing.
  • !There is a strong smell, smoke, overheating, or any symptom that suggests a real-time safety problem rather than a stored code alone.
If the light is steady and the vehicle still drives normally: Often yes for a short time, but it should not be ignored if drivability changes are obvious.

What to check first

Step-by-step checks

  1. 1

    Safety first

    Avoid driving hard if the transmission is slipping, harshly shifting, or in limp mode

  2. 2

    Free - no tools

    Check whether the issue appears with harsh shifts, slip, or delayed engagement

  3. 3

    Basic tool needed

    Inspect the sensor connector and harness for fluid contamination or damage

  4. 4

    Basic tool needed

    Look for related output speed or gear-ratio codes that can help narrow the fault

  5. 5

    Basic tool needed

    If scan data is available, compare input speed with engine RPM and vehicle behavior

  6. 6

    Basic tool needed

    Notice whether the code appeared after transmission service or fluid work

If the code returns

  • -If the sensor signal is implausible, wiring or sensor failure becomes more likely.
  • -If the sensor signal looks good but the transmission still shifts badly, inspect the internal transmission side.
  • -If the code returns after connector service, recheck the wiring route and sensor fit.

Background

What this code means

P0716 is a generic OBD-II code for input/turbine speed sensor range or performance.

The transmission control system uses input speed to understand what the gearbox is doing. If that signal is not believable, the ECU may set a fault and shift behavior can become rough or delayed.

Diagnosis

Common causes

Most common

Failed input shaft speed sensor

The sensor may no longer report a believable input speed value.

Common

Connector or wiring damage

Heat, fluid contamination, or corrosion can interrupt the signal.

Common

Internal transmission fault

A mechanical or hydraulic problem can make the signal look wrong.

Possible

Debris on the sensor tip

Metal debris can interfere with the sensor reading.

Avoid these mistakes

What not to do

  • xDo not replace the module first if the sensor circuit is clearly damaged.
  • xDo not keep driving hard if the transmission is slipping or in limp mode.

Parts

Parts that may need replacing

PartTypical costNotes
Input shaft speed sensor$40-$180Most relevant when the sensor value is not believable.
Connector or wiring repair$50-$250Often the actual fix when the circuit is contaminated or intermittent.
Internal transmission repair$800-$3,000Relevant when the sensor is fine but the gearbox is not behaving correctly.

See also

Related OBD codes

Source notes

Generic OBD-II (SAE J1979 / ISO 15031-5). P0716 was seeded from dtcdb and then expanded around input shaft speed sensor range/performance faults, with emphasis on sensor, wiring, and internal transmission checks.

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

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