P0125 on a 2022 Honda Accord

Coolant Too Cold for Closed-Loop Fuel Control

Severity: low Safe to drive (short term) Mid-size Sedan 2020-2024 Honda Accord

What does P0125 mean on a 2022 Honda Accord?

P0125 is set when the engine fails to reach the calibrated closed-loop threshold temperature within a calibrated time and distance. Closed loop fuel control requires the engine to be warm enough that the oxygen sensors are reliable and the ECM can trust their feedback. When coolant never crosses that threshold, the ECM remains in open loop indefinitely and sets P0125 as evidence the engine is not reaching its operating temperature.

Symptoms on a 2022 Honda Accord

Likely causes on a 2022 Honda Accord

  1. Thermostat stuck open or partially open Most common
    Estimated repair: $80– $350
  2. Wrong-temperature thermostat installed Common
    Estimated repair: $30– $200
  3. Failed engine coolant temperature (ECT) sensor reading low Occasional
    Estimated repair: $80– $250
  4. Cooling fan running continuously due to a separate fault Occasional
    Estimated repair: $100– $500
  5. Heater core bypass leak letting coolant circulate freely Rare
    Estimated repair: $50– $250

How to diagnose this on a 2022 Honda Accord

  1. Compare coolant temperature climb to a known baseline

    Graph the coolant temperature PID from a cold start. The engine should reach approximately 180 °F within 10 minutes of driving in moderate weather. A coolant temperature that hovers in the 140–160 °F range is the textbook thermostat-stuck-open fingerprint.

    Tools: Scan tool with ECT graphing

  2. Verify the ECT sensor agrees with reality

    Point an infrared thermometer at the cylinder head or upper radiator hose. Compare to the scan tool reading. Disagreement of more than 15 °F means the sensor is reading wrong — a bad sensor will set P0125 even with a perfect thermostat.

    Tools: Infrared thermometer, Scan tool

  3. Confirm the thermostat opening temperature

    Pull the thermostat (if access permits) and test in a pot of water with a kitchen thermometer — heat the water and watch when the thermostat opens. Should match the stamped rating (typically 195 °F / 90 °C). A thermostat that opens at room temperature is finished.

    Tools: Thermostat removal tools, Cooking thermometer, Pot for testing

  4. Check that the cooling fan is not running prematurely

    Watch the cooling fan on a cold start. A fan that starts running immediately keeps the engine over-cooled. Diagnose that separate fault first — a new thermostat will not fix P0125 if the fan is the real cause.

    Tools: Visual inspection

  5. Inspect the radiator hose temperature pattern

    Cold-start the engine. The upper radiator hose should stay cool for several minutes (thermostat closed) and then warm rapidly. A hose that warms gradually from idle confirms the thermostat is stuck open.

    Tools: Infrared thermometer

Common fixes

About the 2020-2024 Honda Accord

The 2020-2024 Honda Accord was commonly sold with the following powertrains: 1.5L Turbo I4, 2.0L Turbo I4, 2.4L I4, 2.0L Hybrid I4. Common trims include LX, Sport, EX, EX-L, Touring.

P0125 vs P0128

These two codes are closely related but slightly different:

In practice both usually trace to the same cause (thermostat stuck open), but the threshold and the symptom are different. P0125 sets on engines that miss the closed-loop entry point; P0128 sets on engines that warm up partially but stay under the thermostat’s regulating temperature.

Why P0125 hurts emissions even more than P0128

P0125 means the ECM is running open-loop indefinitely — using a calibrated fuel map rather than O2 feedback. Open-loop fueling is rich-biased for cold-start protection, which:

Fix it within weeks of detection, not months.

When the ECT sensor is the cheap surprise fix

A failing ECT sensor that reads 50 °F low can set P0125 even though the engine is actually reaching normal temperature. Always compare the scan-tool ECT reading to a real infrared thermometer measurement on the engine before replacing the thermostat. A $40 sensor saves $300 in unnecessary thermostat labor.

Related diagnostic codes