P2189: System Too Lean at Idle (Bank 2)
TL;DR
P2189 = system too lean at idle (Bank 2). 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.
Can I keep driving with P2189?
IF it idles acceptably → drive short-term while diagnosing. IF it idles very rough, stalls or knocks → 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 off idle
- Often a companion P2187/P0174 code
Top causes (ranked by probability)
| Likely cause | Probability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Vacuum / intake leak (unmetered air) | 50% | Worst at idle — smoke-test it |
| Dirty MAF sensor | 25% | Affects both banks if dirty |
| Weak fuel delivery (pressure/injectors) | 15% | |
| Stuck-open PCV valve | 10% |
What does P2189 mean?
Technical explanation
P2189 mirrors P2187 for Bank 2: fuel trims show a lean condition at idle on the bank without cylinder 1. Unmetered air has the greatest effect at idle, so vacuum/intake leaks dominate, followed by a contaminated MAF, stuck-open PCV, or low fuel pressure. P2189 with P2187 (both banks) points to a shared cause.
In simple terms
P2189 means Bank 2 of your engine is running lean at idle — the same idle air-leak problem as P2187, just on the other side. A cracked vacuum hose or intake leak is the usual culprit; a smoke test finds it quickly.
How to diagnose P2189 (step by step)
- Check whether P2187 is also present. Both banks lean at idle → shared cause (MAF/fuel/central leak); Bank 2 only → localized leak.
- Read Bank 2 idle fuel trims. Confirm lean trims worst at idle.
- Smoke-test the intake. Focus on Bank 2 runners, hoses and gaskets.
- Clean/test the MAF. Especially if both banks are lean.
- Check the PCV and fuel pressure. Rule out a stuck PCV or low fuel pressure.
Repair options & cost
- Repair Bank 2 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 time | 20 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
Vehicle-specific notes
- Only engines with two banks have a Bank 2.
- Diagnose with P2187/P0174 — they share causes.
- Common on aging European V-engines with brittle plastic intake/PCV parts.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Replacing the O2 sensor first
- Skipping the smoke test
- Ignoring the PCV system
- Working on the wrong bank
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between P2187 and P2189?
Both are idle-lean codes on different banks: P2187 is Bank 1 and P2189 is Bank 2. Seen together they usually share one cause.
Why is P2189 only at idle?
Unmetered air from a vacuum leak has the biggest effect at idle, where airflow is low, so the lean condition shows up mainly there.
Is P2189 serious?
Medium severity. The car runs but may idle rough or stall; address a sustained lean condition promptly.
P2189 summary
| Meaning | System too lean at idle (Bank 2) |
|---|---|
| Severity | Medium |
| Safe to drive? | Yes, short-term (watch for stalling) |
| Top cause | Vacuum/intake leak (50%) |
| DIY cost | $0–$250 |
| Shop cost | $100–$500 |