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How to Fix P0420 Yourself UK — DIY Guide to Catalyst Efficiency Fault

Updated May 2026 · By AI-Diagnostics-Pro AI · 10 min read

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Fault code P0420 — "Catalyst System Efficiency Below Threshold, Bank 1" — is one of the most common check engine light codes in UK cars. Garages frequently quote £400–£800 for a new catalytic converter the moment they see it. But in a large proportion of cases, the fix costs £15–£150 and is well within DIY capability. This guide walks you through a systematic diagnosis process so you fix the right thing first.

Good news for DIYers: The most common cause of P0420 is a lazy upstream oxygen sensor, not a failed catalytic converter. An O2 sensor replacement is a straightforward job on most UK cars — 30–60 minutes with basic tools.

What P0420 Actually Means

Your car has two oxygen sensors in the exhaust — one upstream (before the catalytic converter) and one downstream (after it). Under normal operation, the upstream sensor switches rapidly between rich and lean readings as the engine management system adjusts fuel delivery. The downstream sensor, by contrast, should show a relatively stable reading because the catalytic converter is smoothing out the exhaust gas composition.

P0420 is stored when the ECU detects that the downstream sensor is switching in a similar pattern to the upstream sensor — meaning the catalytic converter is no longer doing its job of processing the exhaust gases. But this can happen for several reasons beyond a genuinely worn cat.

Tools You'll Need

Safety first: Never work under a car supported only by a trolley jack. Always use axle stands or ramps. The exhaust system runs at extremely high temperatures — let the car cool fully before touching any exhaust components.

Step-by-Step DIY Diagnosis and Fix

1

Confirm the code and check for related codes

Connect your OBD2 scanner and confirm P0420 is stored. Crucially, check for any other stored codes at the same time. If you have any of these codes alongside P0420, fix them first before doing anything else:

DIY cost: £0 (just the scanner you already have)

2

Check for engine issues causing cat damage

Before spending any money, do a quick visual health check of the engine:

Oil or coolant entering the combustion chamber coats and poisons the catalytic converter's precious metal substrate. Replacing the cat without fixing this first means the new cat will fail within months.

DIY cost: £0

3

Inspect the exhaust for leaks

With the engine fully warm, carefully inspect the exhaust system from the manifold to the catalytic converter for leaks. Pay particular attention to:

You can use a smoke machine (many garages will do this for free or £20–£30) or carefully hold a lit stick of incense near joints while the engine idles — any exhaust leak will disturb the smoke. Small exhaust leaks upstream of the cat introduce extra oxygen into the exhaust stream and cause false P0420 readings.

DIY fix cost: £5–£50 (exhaust paste, new gasket or short section of pipe)

4

Test the upstream O2 sensor with live data

This is the most important diagnostic step. Using your OBD2 scanner's live data mode, watch the upstream (pre-cat, sensor 1) oxygen sensor voltage at idle for 2–3 minutes, then blip the throttle:

A lazy or dead upstream O2 sensor is the single most common cause of P0420 in UK cars. The ECU misreads catalyst efficiency because it's getting incorrect upstream data.

DIY cost: £0 (just your time with the scanner)

5

Replace the upstream oxygen sensor (if faulty)

If the upstream sensor is confirmed slow or dead, replacing it is a straightforward DIY job on most UK cars:

  1. Let the engine cool completely
  2. Locate the upstream O2 sensor — it's screwed into the exhaust pipe or manifold before the catalytic converter, with a wiring plug going to the engine loom
  3. Spray the sensor threads generously with Plus Gas or WD40 Specialist and leave for at least 30 minutes (longer on older cars)
  4. Unplug the wiring connector
  5. Use a proper O2 sensor socket (22mm with a slot for the wire) to unscrew the sensor — turn anticlockwise
  6. Apply a small amount of copper grease to the threads of the new sensor (avoid the tip)
  7. Screw in by hand first, then torque to approximately 40–50Nm
  8. Reconnect the wiring plug
Correct sensor part number matters. O2 sensors are vehicle-specific — always use your car's registration to source the correct upstream lambda sensor. Bosch, Denso and NGK are reliable brands available from Euro Car Parts, GSF and Amazon.

DIY cost: £30–£80 for the sensor (vs £80–£200 fitted at a garage)

6

Clear the code and complete a drive cycle

After any repair, clear the P0420 fault code using your OBD2 scanner. Then complete a proper drive cycle to allow the ECU to re-evaluate catalyst efficiency:

DIY cost: £0

7

Rescan — if P0420 returns, the cat is the likely cause

After the drive cycle, rescan the car. If P0420 has not returned and all readiness monitors show complete, the repair was successful. If P0420 returns after a confirmed good upstream O2 sensor and no exhaust leaks, the catalytic converter itself is likely genuinely degraded and requires replacement.

At this point, refer to our UK catalytic converter replacement cost guide for what to expect and how to avoid being overcharged.

DIY vs Garage — Honest Assessment

TaskDIY difficultyDIY costGarage cost
Diagnose cause with live dataEasy (with right scanner)£0–£15 (scanner app)£50–£120
Fix exhaust leak (paste/gasket)Easy–Medium£5–£30£60–£150
Replace upstream O2 sensorMedium£30–£80£100–£220
Replace catalytic converterMedium–Hard£100–£350 (parts)£300–£800

When to Call a Garage

DIY diagnosis and O2 sensor replacement is achievable for most home mechanics with basic tools. However, call a garage if:

Related guides

→ P0420 full diagnosis guide — causes, UK costs and MOT advice → Catalytic converter replacement cost UK 2026 → UK MOT failure rates by OBD2 fault code → P0171 running lean — diagnosis and fix guide → P0300 random misfire — causes and UK repair costs

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Disclaimer: AI-Diagnostics-Pro provides information for educational purposes only. Always consult a qualified mechanic before carrying out vehicle repairs. Work on exhaust systems involves high temperatures and potential safety risks — take appropriate precautions.