P0402: EGR Excessive Flow Detected

Severity: medium System: EGR System Can drive: caution
Quick answer: P0402 means too much exhaust gas is being recirculated through the EGR system — the opposite of P0401. This usually happens when the EGR valve sticks open or its passages let flow when they shouldn’t. It can cause rough idle and stalling. The common causes are a stuck EGR valve, carbon buildup holding it open, or a sensor/control fault.

TL;DR

P0402 = excessive EGR flow (opposite of P0401). Severity: medium. Drivable but may idle rough or stall. Top causes: EGR valve stuck open (50%), carbon holding it open (25%), sensor/control fault (25%). Fix: $20–$120 DIY (clean) up to ~$400 (valve).

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Can I keep driving with P0402?

Yes, with caution.

IF the engine idles acceptably → you can drive short-term while you clean/inspect the EGR valve. IF it stalls or idles very roughly → drive minimally and fix it sooner, as stalling in traffic is a safety concern.

Symptoms

  • Check engine light on
  • Rough idle
  • Stalling, especially at idle or low speed
  • Hesitation
  • Failed emissions test

Top causes (ranked by probability)

Likely causeProbabilityNotes
EGR valve stuck open
50%
Most common
Carbon buildup preventing the valve from seating
25%
Faulty EGR position/DPFE sensor or control
25%

What does P0402 mean?

Technical explanation

The ECM compares commanded EGR flow with measured flow (via the EGR position sensor, DPFE, or MAP). When measured flow exceeds the commanded amount — typically because the valve is stuck open or carbon prevents it from seating — P0402 is set. Excess inert gas at idle dilutes the mixture, causing rough idle and stalling.

In simple terms

Your engine recycles a little exhaust to run cooler. P0402 means too much is getting through — usually because the EGR valve is stuck open. That extra exhaust at idle makes the engine run rough or stall.

How to diagnose P0402 (step by step)

  1. Scan and confirm. Note any companion EGR sensor codes.
  2. Inspect the EGR valve. Remove and check whether it seats fully or is held open by carbon.
  3. Clean the valve and passages. Use EGR/throttle-body cleaner to free a sticking valve.
  4. Test valve operation. Confirm it closes fully and the position sensor reads correctly.
  5. Check the control circuit. Verify the valve is not being commanded open erroneously.
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Repair options & cost

  • Clean the EGR valve and passages
  • Replace a stuck/faulty EGR valve
  • Replace the EGR position/DPFE sensor
  • Repair the control circuit
DIY cost$20–$120
Workshop cost$150–$400
Repair time45 min (clean) to 1.5 hours (replace valve)

Costs are local ballpark ranges and vary by region and vehicle.

Tools you’ll need

  • OBD-II scanner (BlueDriver / ANCEL)
  • EGR / throttle-body cleaner
  • Basic socket set
Scan your car: recommended OBD-II scanners →

Vehicle-specific notes

  • A valve stuck even slightly open behaves like excessive flow at idle.
  • Clean both the valve and the intake EGR ports.
  • Diesels handle EGR differently; symptoms and fixes vary.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Replacing the valve when cleaning would free it
  • Ignoring carbon in the passages
  • Overlooking a control-circuit fault commanding it open
  • Not clearing the code after repair

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between P0401 and P0402?

P0401 is insufficient EGR flow (too little), while P0402 is excessive EGR flow (too much), usually from a valve stuck open.

Can I just clean the EGR valve for P0402?

Often yes — if carbon is holding the valve open, cleaning it so it seats fully resolves many P0402 cases.

Is P0402 dangerous?

It can cause stalling, which is a safety concern in traffic, so diagnose it promptly even though the car still runs.

P0402 summary

MeaningExcessive EGR flow
SeverityMedium
Safe to drive?Yes, short-term (watch for stalling)
Top causeEGR valve stuck open (50%)
DIY cost$20–$120
Shop cost$150–$400
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