P0016 on a 2022 Kia Sportage

Crank/Cam Correlation Fault (Bank 1 Intake)

P0016 on a 2022 Kia Sportage indicates crank/cam correlation fault (bank 1 intake). It usually stays drivable short-term but should be diagnosed promptly. The most common cause is stretched timing chain or worn guides (typically $800–$3,500). Confirm the root cause before replacing parts.

Severity: high Safe to drive (short term) Compact SUV 2020-2024 Kia Sportage

Reviewed by MECH AI Editorial · Last verified

What does P0016 mean on a 2022 Kia Sportage?

P0016 is set when the ECM compares the relative timing of the crankshaft and Bank 1 intake camshaft sensors and finds them more than a calibrated number of degrees out of alignment. This almost always means one of three things: the timing chain or belt has stretched or jumped, the cam phaser is mechanically stuck, or one of the position sensors is producing a bad signal. P0016 is one of the strongest early indicators of timing chain wear on modern engines.

This guide covers P0016 across the 2020-2024 Kia Sportage generation — the symptoms, causes, and diagnostic steps below apply to every model year from 2020 through 2024.

Is it safe to drive a 2022 Kia Sportage with P0016?

In most cases a 2022 Kia Sportage stays drivable for short trips with P0016 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 P0016 on a 2022 Kia Sportage?

What causes P0016 on a 2022 Kia Sportage?

Cause Likelihood Estimated repair (USD)
Stretched timing chain or worn guides Chain stretch is a well-documented failure on many 2010-2020 engines. Most common $800–$3,500
Stuck or worn cam phaser (cannot return to base timing) Common $400–$1,500
Failed cam or crank position sensor producing offset readings Common $100–$400
VVT oil control valve stuck open advancing cam without command Occasional $100–$450
Low oil pressure causing the cam phaser to drift Occasional $50–$200
Tone ring slipped or damaged on the cam or crankshaft Occasional $300–$1,500
Timing chain jumped one tooth after a tensioner failure Rare $1,000–$4,000

How to diagnose this on a 2022 Kia Sportage

  1. Verify engine oil level and pressure first

    P0016 with low oil pressure is often the VVT system unable to return the cam phaser to base position. Confirm oil level on level ground, check condition (dark or sludgy?), and measure pressure at idle and 2500 RPM before proceeding.

    Tools: Dipstick, Mechanical oil pressure gauge

  2. Read cam-crank correlation in live data

    With the engine running, watch the cam and crank position PIDs. They should maintain a fixed offset. If the offset drifts as RPM rises, the chain is stretching under load. If the offset is static but wrong, the chain may have jumped a tooth.

    Tools: Scan tool with cam and crank position PIDs

  3. Listen for timing chain noise

    With a stethoscope on the front timing cover, listen at cold start. A healthy chain runs silent. A rattle for 1–3 seconds at cold start that quiets with oil pressure is early chain wear. Continuous rattle at idle indicates advanced wear — at this point the chain must be replaced soon to avoid valve damage.

    Tools: Mechanic's stethoscope

  4. Inspect timing chain stretch directly (specific engines)

    On engines with documented chain wear (BMW N20/N26, Ford 5.4 3V, VW/Audi EA888, GM 3.6 LFX/LLT), the chain wear can be measured with the front cover off. The chain mark on the head/cam sprocket relative to the manufacturer's wear indicator tells you the remaining service life.

    Tools: Engine service manual, Specialized timing tools (engine-specific)

  5. Test the cam and crank sensors with a scope

    Both sensors should produce clean square-wave signals. Compare to known-good waveforms in the service manual. A sensor with a missing tooth or noise on the signal will set P0016 even with a perfect chain. Replacing the sensor is the cheap fix to rule out before opening the timing cover.

    Tools: Oscilloscope or scan tool with raw sensor PIDs

NHTSA complaints & recalls for the 2022 Kia Sportage

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

42 owner complaints
6 involved a crash
2 involved a fire
1 reported injuries
  • ENGINE 19
  • POWER TRAIN 3
  • ELECTRICAL SYSTEM 5
  • FORWARD COLLISION AVOIDANCE 5
  • TRAILER HITCHES 4

1 active recall

  • TRAILER HITCHES Sep 2022

    Kia America, Inc. (Kia) is recalling certain 2016-2022 Sorento, 2021-2022 Sorento Hybrid (HEV), 2022-2023 Sorento Plug-In Hybrid (PHEV), and 2017-2022 Sportage vehicles equipped with a tow hitch harness installed as original equipment, or purchased as an accessory through a Kia d…

    NHTSA campaign 22V703000

How do I fix P0016 on a 2022 Kia Sportage?

About the 2020-2024 Kia Sportage

The 2020-2024 Kia Sportage was commonly sold with the following powertrains: 2.5L I4, 1.6L Turbo I4, 1.6L Hybrid I4. Common trims include LX, EX, X-Line, SX, X-Pro.

Why P0016 is a “cheap or expensive” code

P0016 has a wide repair-cost range because the root causes range from a $30 sensor to a $3,000+ timing chain replacement. Always test the cheap parts first: oil level and pressure, then the cam and crank sensors, then the VVT oil control valve, before assuming a chain job. Skipping straight to the chain wastes money about a third of the time.

P0016 on engines with chain-stretch history

A short list of engines where P0016 should be assumed to be a timing chain problem until proven otherwise:

On these engines a P0016 with chain rattle is essentially a guaranteed chain job. Replace as a complete kit (chain, guides, tensioner, sprockets) — half-replacing leads to repeat failure.

What happens if you ignore P0016

If the underlying cause is chain stretch, the chain will eventually skip a tooth — at which point the engine will lose compression and on interference engines (most modern designs), the valves will hit the pistons. The repair bill jumps from “timing chain” ($1,500–$3,500) to “rebuilt cylinder head or new engine” ($4,000–$10,000+). P0016 on a documented chain-stretch engine should be fixed within weeks, not months.

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