P2187: System Too Lean at Idle (Bank 1)

Severity: medium System: Fuel & Air System Can drive: caution
Quick answer: P2187 means the engine is running lean on Bank 1 specifically at idle. Because it shows up at idle, the classic cause is a vacuum leak (intake, PCV or a cracked hose) that lets in unmetered air, though a dirty MAF sensor or weak fuel delivery can also cause it. Common on aging European engines with brittle plastic intake parts.

TL;DR

P2187 = system too lean at idle (Bank 1). Severity: medium. Drivable but may idle rough/stall. Top causes: vacuum/intake leak (50%), dirty MAF (25%), fuel delivery (15%), PCV (10%). A smoke test finds the leak fast.

Ad slot: above-fold

Can I keep driving with P2187?

Yes, with caution.

IF it idles acceptably → drive short-term while diagnosing. IF it idles very rough, stalls or you hear knocking → minimize driving; a sustained lean condition runs hot and stalling is a safety concern.

Symptoms

  • Check engine light on
  • Rough or unstable idle
  • Stalling at idle/stops
  • Hesitation just off idle
  • Often a companion P0171 code

Top causes (ranked by probability)

Likely causeProbabilityNotes
Vacuum / intake leak (unmetered air)
50%
Worst at idle — smoke-test it
Dirty MAF sensor
25%
Weak fuel delivery (pressure/injectors)
15%
Stuck-open PCV valve
10%

What does P2187 mean?

Technical explanation

P2187 sets when Bank 1 fuel trims show a lean condition at idle (low engine load). Unmetered air has the biggest proportional effect at idle, so vacuum/intake leaks dominate. A contaminated MAF under-reporting airflow, a stuck-open PCV, or insufficient fuel pressure can also drive idle-lean trims. It often appears with P0171.

In simple terms

P2187 means your engine is getting too much air (or too little fuel) when idling. Small air leaks matter most at idle, so a cracked vacuum hose or intake leak is the usual culprit. A smoke test quickly shows where air is sneaking in.

How to diagnose P2187 (step by step)

  1. Read idle fuel trims. Confirm Bank 1 lean trims are worst at idle and improve off-idle (points to a vacuum leak).
  2. Smoke-test the intake. Find cracked hoses, intake/PCV leaks and gasket leaks.
  3. Clean/test the MAF. Rule out a contaminated MAF under-reporting air.
  4. Check the PCV valve. A stuck-open PCV is a common idle-lean source.
  5. Check fuel pressure. Low pressure can cause idle-lean trims.
Ad slot: post-steps

Repair options & cost

  • Repair vacuum/intake leaks
  • Replace the PCV valve
  • Clean or replace the MAF sensor
  • Restore fuel pressure
DIY cost$0–$250
Workshop cost$100–$500
Repair time20 min (hose/PCV) to 1.5 hours (fuel)

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

Tools you’ll need

  • OBD-II scanner (BlueDriver / ANCEL)
  • Smoke machine
  • MAF cleaner
Scan your car: recommended OBD-II scanners →

Vehicle-specific notes

  • Common on aging European engines (VW/Audi/BMW) with brittle plastic intake/PCV parts.
  • Diagnose with any P0171 — they share causes.
  • A small leak can be hard to see; a smoke test is worth it.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Replacing the O2 sensor first
  • Skipping the smoke test on a clearly idle-lean code
  • Ignoring the PCV system
  • Using non-MAF cleaner on the sensor

Frequently asked questions

Why is P2187 only at idle?

Unmetered air from a vacuum leak has the biggest effect at idle, where airflow is low. At higher loads the extra air is proportionally smaller, so the lean condition shows up mainly at idle.

What is the most common cause of P2187?

A vacuum or intake leak. A dirty MAF sensor, stuck PCV valve, or weak fuel delivery are next.

Does P2187 come with P0171?

Often, since both indicate a lean Bank 1. Fixing the shared cause (usually a leak or MAF) typically clears both.

P2187 summary

MeaningSystem too lean at idle (Bank 1)
SeverityMedium
Safe to drive?Yes, short-term (watch for stalling)
Top causeVacuum/intake leak (50%)
DIY cost$0–$250
Shop cost$100–$500
Ad slot: end-of-page