The engine warning light (also called the check engine light, or M.I.L. for Malfunction Indicator Lamp) is one of the most misunderstood symbols on your dashboard. The reality: it could be a £20 sensor, or it could be something serious. Without diagnostics, you can’t tell.
Solid amber vs flashing amber vs red
The colour and behaviour of the light tell you a lot:
- Solid amber/yellow: non-urgent. Drive carefully to a garage when convenient. Most common.
- Flashing amber/yellow: engine misfire detected. Drive gently and book in within a day or two; ignored, this damages your catalytic converter (which is expensive).
- Red: stop the car safely as soon as you can. Don’t continue driving.
What we do when you bring the car in
We plug a diagnostic reader into the O.B.D. port (usually under the dashboard near the steering column). This pulls fault codes from the engine management system. Each code is specific. For example, P0301 means a misfire on cylinder 1, P0420 means catalytic converter efficiency is low.
From the codes, we work out what the actual cause is. Sometimes a fault code points to a specific part; sometimes it’s a symptom of something else and needs further investigation. Our diagnostic charge starts at £45.
Common causes (and rough costs)
- Faulty O2 sensor: around £80-£150 fitted.
- Loose or faulty fuel cap: sometimes £0, just a clean and reset.
- Dirty or failing M.A.F. sensor: £100-£200 fitted.
- Spark plugs / coil pack: £80-£250 depending on engine.
- Catalytic converter: £400+ (this is the expensive one we try to avoid by acting on misfires early).
Should I just clear the light and hope it goes away?
You can clear the code, but if the underlying issue is real, it’ll come straight back the next time you drive. Worse: you’ve now masked the warning, so when something else develops you might miss it. Better to find out what’s actually wrong.