P0014 on a 2022 Toyota Camry

Exhaust Cam Over-Advanced (Bank 1, VVT)

P0014 on a 2022 Toyota Camry indicates exhaust cam over-advanced (bank 1, vvt). It usually stays drivable short-term but should be diagnosed promptly. The most common cause is stuck or sludged exhaust-side vvt oil control valve (typically $100–$450). Confirm the root cause before replacing parts.

Severity: high Safe to drive (short term) Mid-size Sedan 2020-2024 Toyota Camry

Reviewed by MECH AI Editorial · Last verified · Includes 20 active NHTSA TSBs

What does P0014 mean on a 2022 Toyota Camry?

P0014 is set when the engine control module commands the Bank 1 exhaust camshaft to a specific advance position and the actual cam position does not match within tolerance. On engines with dual-cam VVT (intake + exhaust phasers), P0014 is the exhaust-side counterpart of P0011. The cause is almost always the same family of failures: a stuck oil control valve, dirty oil starving the phaser, or the phaser itself failing.

This guide covers P0014 across the 2020-2024 Toyota Camry generation — the symptoms, causes, and diagnostic steps below apply to every model year from 2020 through 2024.

Is it safe to drive a 2022 Toyota Camry with P0014?

In most cases a 2022 Toyota Camry stays drivable for short trips with P0014 active, but diagnose and repair it promptly. This is a high-severity code — ignoring it can lead to further damage or a failed emissions test.

What are the symptoms of P0014 on a 2022 Toyota Camry?

What causes P0014 on a 2022 Toyota Camry?

Cause Likelihood Estimated repair (USD)
Stuck or sludged exhaust-side VVT oil control valve Most common $100–$450
Low engine oil level or pressure starving the exhaust cam phaser Most common $50–$200
Sludged oil passages from skipped maintenance Common $100–$600
Failed exhaust cam phaser / VVT actuator Common $600–$1,800
Stretched timing chain affecting exhaust cam position Occasional $800–$3,000
Damaged exhaust cam sensor wiring or connector Occasional $80–$350

How to diagnose this on a 2022 Toyota Camry

  1. Confirm oil level, condition, and pressure first

    VVT systems are oil-powered. Verify level is at full on a level surface with a warm engine, oil is clean (not dark or sludgy), and viscosity matches the OEM spec. Measure oil pressure with a mechanical gauge — typical 15–25 psi at idle, 40–60 psi at 2500 RPM. Low pressure must be fixed before chasing VVT parts.

    Tools: Mechanical oil pressure gauge, Dipstick / level check

  2. Read live exhaust cam position vs. commanded position

    Scan-tool live data shows commanded and actual cam position. Watch while bidirectionally commanding cam advance. A working system tracks within 1–2 degrees of command. Lag of 5 degrees or oscillation points at the actuator or oil control valve.

    Tools: Bidirectional scan tool with cam position PIDs

  3. Inspect and clean the exhaust-side oil control valve

    Remove the exhaust-side OCV. Check the inlet screen for sludge or metal debris. Bench-test with 12 V — the valve should click and open. Air should pass freely when energized and seal when de-energized. A sticking valve causes the most common P0014.

    Tools: Socket set, Brake cleaner (NOT MAF-safe), 12 V test source, Compressed air

  4. Listen for cam phaser noise at startup

    A failing exhaust phaser often rattles at cold start for 1–3 seconds. Use a mechanic's stethoscope at the front of the cylinder head. The noise stops as oil pressure builds. Continuous rattle indicates advanced phaser wear.

    Tools: Mechanic's stethoscope

  5. Verify timing chain integrity (specific engines)

    On engines with documented chain wear (BMW N20/N26, Ford 5.4 3V, VW EA888, GM 3.6 LFX), the phaser cannot fully advance once the chain has stretched — P0014 sets even with a perfect phaser. Check live cam-crank correlation drift under load.

    Tools: Scan tool with cam-crank correlation

Known Technical Service Bulletins for the 2020-2024 Toyota Camry

Manufacturers publish Technical Service Bulletins (TSBs) when a known issue affects a specific vehicle. These bulletins come from the NHTSA database for your Toyota Camry.

+14 more TSBs available in MECH AI's TSB explorer for this vehicle.

NHTSA complaints & recalls for the 2022 Toyota Camry

Owner-reported safety complaints and official recalls filed with the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for the 2022 Toyota Camry. Use these to gauge how common a problem is on your specific vehicle before you start chasing Toyota Camry diagnostics.

55 owner complaints
12 involved a crash
1 involved a fire
9 reported injuries
  • VEHICLE SPEED CONTROL 6
  • AIR BAGS 10
  • UNKNOWN OR OTHER 7
  • SERVICE BRAKES 7
  • ELECTRICAL SYSTEM 7

1 active recall

  • AIR BAGS:SENSOR:OCCUPANT CLASSIFICATION Dec 2023

    Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing (Toyota) is recalling certain 2020-2021 Avalon, Avalon Hybrid, Corolla, Highlander, Highlander Hybrid, RAV4, RAV4 Hybrid, Lexus ES350, Lexus RX350, Lexus RX450H, 2021 Sienna Hybrid, Lexus ES250, 2020-2022 Camry, Camry Hybrid, and ES300H ve…

    NHTSA campaign 23V865000

How do I fix P0014 on a 2022 Toyota Camry?

About the 2020-2024 Toyota Camry

The 2020-2024 Toyota Camry was commonly sold with the following powertrains: 2.5L I4, 3.5L V6, 2.5L Hybrid I4. Common trims include LE, SE, XLE, XSE.

P0014 vs P0011

These two codes describe the same kind of fault on different camshafts:

Engines with dual VVT have separate phasers and separate oil control valves for intake and exhaust. P0011 and P0014 setting together points to a common cause (oil pressure, sludge, common chain issue). P0014 alone isolates to the exhaust-side hardware.

Why oil maintenance matters more than the phaser itself

Most P0014 cases on engines with under 100,000 miles trace back to oil maintenance: extended intervals, wrong viscosity, or a slow oil leak that drops level over time. The cam phaser is mechanically robust if fed clean, high-pressure oil. A $50 oil change has resolved more P0014 codes than any other single repair.

Engines that disproportionately set P0014

P0014 on a 2022 Toyota Camry: frequently asked questions

What does diagnostic trouble code P0014 mean on a 2022 Toyota Camry?

P0014 is set when the engine control module commands the Bank 1 exhaust camshaft to a specific advance position and the actual cam position does not match within tolerance. On engines with dual-cam VVT (intake + exhaust phasers), P0014 is the exhaust-side counterpart of P0011. The cause is almost always the same family of failures: a stuck oil control valve, dirty oil starving the phaser, or the phaser itself failing.

What are the symptoms of P0014 on a 2022 Toyota Camry?

Check Engine Light is illuminated. Rough idle, particularly when the engine is hot. Reduced low-end torque and slow throttle response. Increased emissions at idle. Possible engine stalling at low RPM. Slight reduction in fuel economy. Cold-start rattle from the cam area

What causes P0014 on a 2022 Toyota Camry?

Stuck or sludged exhaust-side VVT oil control valve (most-common). Low engine oil level or pressure starving the exhaust cam phaser (most-common). Sludged oil passages from skipped maintenance (common). Failed exhaust cam phaser / VVT actuator (common). Stretched timing chain affecting exhaust cam position (occasional). Damaged exhaust cam sensor wiring or connector (occasional)

Is it safe to drive a 2022 Toyota Camry with P0014?

In most cases a 2022 Toyota Camry stays drivable for short trips with P0014 active, but it should be diagnosed and repaired promptly — this is a high-severity code. Ignoring it can lead to further damage or a failed emissions test.

Related diagnostic codes

P0014 on other Toyota Camry model years