P0172 on a 2022 Honda Pilot
Fuel System Too Rich (Bank 1)
P0172 on a 2022 Honda Pilot indicates fuel system too rich (bank 1). It usually stays drivable short-term but should be diagnosed promptly. The most common cause is leaking or stuck-open fuel injector(s) on bank 1 (typically $150–$1,200). Confirm the root cause before replacing parts.
What does P0172 mean on a 2022 Honda Pilot?
P0172 is set when the engine control module detects that long-term fuel trim on Bank 1 has been driven beyond approximately −25 % — the ECM is pulling out the maximum amount of fuel it is allowed to remove, and the oxygen sensor still reports a rich mixture. The cause is something delivering excess fuel or restricting air, or a sensor reporting a false rich signal.
This guide covers P0172 across the 2020-2024 Honda Pilot generation — the symptoms, causes, and diagnostic steps below apply to every model year from 2020 through 2024.
Is it safe to drive a 2022 Honda Pilot with P0172?
In most cases a 2022 Honda Pilot stays drivable for short trips with P0172 active, but diagnose and repair it promptly. This is a moderate-severity code — ignoring it can lead to further damage or a failed emissions test.
What are the symptoms of P0172 on a 2022 Honda Pilot?
- Check Engine Light is illuminated
- Strong fuel smell from the exhaust
- Black smoke from the tailpipe under acceleration
- Poor fuel economy (sometimes severely worse — 30 %+ drop)
- Rough idle and hard starting (flooded condition)
- Fouled spark plugs from rich-running conditions
- Eventual catalytic converter damage (P0420 follows)
What causes P0172 on a 2022 Honda Pilot?
| Cause | Likelihood | Estimated repair (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Leaking or stuck-open fuel injector(s) on Bank 1 Drip-test individual injectors to find the leaker. | Most common | $150–$1,200 |
| Failed fuel pressure regulator allowing too much fuel | Common | $100–$400 |
| Restricted or dirty air filter / clogged intake | Common | $20–$80 |
| Failed MAF sensor over-reporting airflow | Common | $30–$350 |
| Stuck-closed EVAP purge valve (purge solenoid leaking fuel vapor) | Occasional | $80–$300 |
| Leaking fuel pressure regulator vacuum hose pulling fuel into the intake | Occasional | $20–$150 |
| Failed upstream O2 sensor biased rich | Occasional | $150–$450 |
| Engine oil contaminated with fuel (overdue oil change after rich running) | Rare | $80–$200 |
How to diagnose this on a 2022 Honda Pilot
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Read fuel trims at idle and 2500 RPM
A scan tool will show short-term (STFT) and long-term (LTFT) fuel trim. If LTFT is around −20 % or worse at all RPMs, the system is truly rich. If trims look normal at the scan tool, the issue may have been intermittent — pull freeze-frame data to see conditions when P0172 set.
Tools: Scan tool with live PIDs
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Inspect the air filter and intake tract
A heavily clogged air filter restricts airflow enough to push the mixture rich. Check the filter, the intake snorkel, and the throttle body for restrictions, soot buildup, or debris.
Tools: Common hand tools, Flashlight
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Check for fuel in the FPR vacuum hose
With the engine off, remove the vacuum hose from the fuel pressure regulator. Fuel inside the hose means the regulator diaphragm is ruptured and fuel is being drawn directly into the intake. Replace the regulator.
Tools: None
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Test injector spray pattern and balance
Use an injector test set, or measure fuel rail pressure drop while pulsing each injector individually with a scan tool. An injector that drops pressure significantly faster than its peers is leaking or flowing too much.
Tools: Scan tool with injector balance test, Fuel pressure gauge
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Verify MAF sensor airflow reading
A healthy MAF reads approximately 1 g/s per liter of displacement at idle (for example, ~3 g/s at idle on a 3.0-liter engine). Readings 30 %+ above that suggest the MAF is over-reporting airflow, which drives the ECM to add fuel.
Tools: Scan tool with MAF PID
NHTSA complaints & recalls for the 2022 Honda Pilot
Owner-reported safety complaints and official recalls filed with the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for the 2022 Honda Pilot. Use these to gauge how common a problem is on your specific vehicle before you start chasing Honda Pilot diagnostics.
- ENGINE 21
- POWER TRAIN 12
- FORWARD COLLISION AVOIDANCE 33
- UNKNOWN OR OTHER 27
- ELECTRICAL SYSTEM 26
4 active recalls
- BACK OVER PREVENTION:DISPLAY FUNCTION Jun 2023
Honda (American Honda Motor Co.) is recalling certain 2018-2023 Odyssey, 2019-2022 Pilot, and 2019-2023 Passport vehicles. Due to a faulty Media Oriented Systems Transport (MOST) communication coaxial cable connector, the rearview camera image may not appear on the display. As…
NHTSA campaign 23V431000 - SERVICE BRAKES, HYDRAULIC:FOUNDATION COMPONENTS:MASTER CYLINDER Jun 2023
Honda (American Honda Motor Co.) is recalling certain 2020-2021 Civic, 2020-2023 Ridgeline, 2021-2023 Passport, 2021-2022 Pilot, and 2020 Acura MDX vehicles. The tie rod fastener that connects the brake booster and the brake master cylinder may have been improperly assembled dur…
NHTSA campaign 23V458000 - AIR BAGS:SENSOR:OCCUPANT CLASSIFICATION:FRONT PASSENGER Feb 2024
Honda (American Honda Motor Co.) is recalling certain 2020-2022 Pilot, Accord, Civic sedan, HR-V, Odyssey, 2020 Civic coupe, Fit, 2021-2022 Civic hatchback, 2021 Civic Type R, Insight, 2020-2021 CR-V, CR-V Hybrid, Passport, Ridgeline, Accord Hybrid, 2020 Acura MDX, 2022 Acura MDX…
NHTSA campaign 24V064000 - AIR BAGS:SENSOR:OCCUPANT CLASSIFICATION:FRONT PASSENGER May 2026
Honda (American Honda Motor Co.) is recalling certain 2018-2021, 2023 Acura TLX, 2019-2024 RDX, 2017-2020, 2022-2026 MDX, 2017-2021, 2023, 2025 Honda Ridgeline, 2017-2022 Pilot, 2019-2021 Passport, 2018-2026 Odyssey, 2019-2022 Insight, 2019-2021 HR-V, 2018-2020 Fit, 2020-2022 CR-…
NHTSA campaign 26V332000
How do I fix P0172 on a 2022 Honda Pilot?
- Replace leaking or over-flowing fuel injector(s)
- Replace the fuel pressure regulator
- Replace the air filter and clean the intake
- Clean or replace the MAF sensor
- Replace the EVAP purge valve
- Change engine oil if fuel-diluted
About the 2020-2024 Honda Pilot
The 2020-2024 Honda Pilot was commonly sold with the following powertrains: 3.5L V6. Common trims include LX, EX, EX-L, Touring, Elite, TrailSport.
How P0172 destroys catalytic converters
Sustained rich operation washes fuel past the rings into the oil, fouls spark plugs, and — worst of all — dumps unburned hydrocarbons into the exhaust. The catalytic converter tries to oxidize that fuel and overheats. Within weeks of driving with P0172 uncorrected, the catalyst can melt internally and set P0420 alongside. At that point you have two repair bills instead of one.
Rich condition vs. flooded engine
P0172 is a steady-state rich condition. A flooded engine — won’t crank, or cranks but won’t fire after a cold start — is a different problem (usually a leaking injector or bad cold-start enrichment logic). Both can set P0172, but flooding is more often acute and visible immediately at the key turn.
When the MAF is reading too high
A MAF that over-reports airflow makes the ECM think more air is entering than really is, so it adds extra fuel to match. This is one of the few P0172 causes that does not involve excess fuel — the fuel system is working correctly, the sensor is lying. MAF cleaning and unmetered-air inspections come before MAF replacement.