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P0430 — Catalyst System Efficiency Below Threshold (Bank 2)

Moderate

Quick answer

P0430 means the computer compared the oxygen sensors before and after the bank 2 catalysttic converter and the converter isn’t cleaning the exhaust like it should. It does NOT automatically mean you need a new converter — failing sensors, exhaust leaks, and engine problems poisoning the cat must be ruled out first, because converters are expensive and the others aren’t.

What it means

P0430 symptoms: what you'll notice

  • Usually no change in how the car drives — the check engine light is often the only sign.
  • A sulfur or rotten-egg smell from the exhaust, especially after hard acceleration, as the converter stops processing fuel byproducts.
  • A metallic rattle from under the car if the bank 2 converter’s internal substrate has broken apart.
  • A failed emissions or smog test — often how this code gets discovered in the first place.
  • Sluggish acceleration and worse fuel economy only in the worst case, when a badly clogged converter is choking the exhaust.

Common causes

Ordered from most to least likely.

  1. 1.

    Converter efficiency genuinely degraded

    Age and mileage — common past 150k miles, much sooner if it was poisoned.

  2. 2.

    Aged or lazy downstream O2 sensor

    A slow rear sensor can mimic a failing converter. Much cheaper than a converter.

  3. 3.

    Exhaust leak near a sensor

    Outside air skews readings; listen for ticking near flanges and welds.

  4. 4.

    Engine running rich, misfiring, or burning oil/coolant

    These overheat or chemically poison the converter — fix them first or the new cat fails too.

  5. 5.

    Wrong or low-quality aftermarket converter from a previous repair

    Bargain universal cats often can’t pass the efficiency monitor.

How to fix it: diagnosis, step by step

Cheapest and most likely checks first.

  1. 1 Check for companion codes first

    Misfires, lean/rich codes, or O2 sensor codes change everything — the converter may be the victim, not the culprit. Fix those first, clear, and see if the efficiency code returns.

  2. 2 Watch both O2 sensors in live data

    Front sensor should oscillate quickly; rear should be comparatively flat at cruise. A rear sensor copying the front supports low efficiency — but a sluggish front sensor or noisy readings point at sensors instead.

  3. 3 Inspect the exhaust for leaks

    Cold engine, listen for tick/puff near manifold, flanges, and sensor bungs. Repair leaks before condemning anything.

  4. 4 Check converter temperature differential

    With an infrared thermometer after a good drive, the outlet should read modestly hotter than the inlet on a working converter. A cooler outlet supports a dead cat; a glowing-hot converter means something upstream is flooding it.

  5. 5 Decide with the evidence

    Sensors healthy + no leaks + engine running clean + code returns = converter replacement. Use an OEM or CARB/EPA-compliant unit; the cheapest universal converters frequently re-set this exact code.

Parts & tools you may need

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Frequently asked questions

What does code P0430 mean?
P0430 means the computer compared the oxygen sensors before and after the bank 2 catalysttic converter and the converter isn’t cleaning the exhaust like it should. It’s moderately serious — you can usually keep driving gently, but diagnose it soon.
Can I drive with P0430?
Yes — the engine runs normally and a low-efficiency converter doesn’t endanger anything mechanically. You’ll fail emissions testing, and if the root cause is an engine problem, that part shouldn’t wait.
Will a fuel additive or “cat cleaner” fix it?
If the code is borderline and the converter is merely contaminated, an additive plus a long highway drive occasionally buys time. A worn-out converter doesn’t come back — no bottle rebuilds precious-metal coatings.
How much is a catalytic converter?
Wide range: roughly $200–600 for quality aftermarket on common cars, over $1,000–2,500 for OEM or low-volume vehicles, plus labor. Which is exactly why you rule out $80 sensors and free leak checks first.
Why did the code come back after a new converter?
Either the converter was the victim of an unfixed engine problem (rich running, misfires, oil), or a bargain universal converter that can’t satisfy the efficiency monitor was installed.
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