P0430 on a 2022 Toyota 4Runner
Catalyst Efficiency Below Threshold (Bank 2)
What does P0430 mean on a 2022 Toyota 4Runner?
P0430 is the Bank 2 counterpart of P0420. It is set when the engine control module compares the upstream and downstream oxygen sensor signals on Bank 2 and determines that the catalytic converter for that bank is no longer storing and releasing oxygen efficiently. P0430 only applies to V-engines and inline engines with separate exhaust banks; four-cylinder engines do not set P0430.
Symptoms on a 2022 Toyota 4Runner
- Check Engine Light is illuminated (steady)
- Slight loss of fuel economy
- Faint sulfur or rotten-egg smell from the exhaust
- Vehicle fails OBD-II emissions / smog testing
- Rarely any drivability issue at idle or cruise
Likely causes on a 2022 Toyota 4Runner
- Worn or contaminated catalytic converter on Bank 2 Most commonEstimated repair: $600– $2,400
- Failing downstream (post-catalyst) O2 sensor on Bank 2 CommonEstimated repair: $150– $450
- Exhaust leak upstream of the Bank 2 downstream O2 sensor CommonEstimated repair: $100– $500
- Untreated misfire or rich/lean condition on Bank 2 cooking the cat OccasionalEstimated repair: $200– $1,200
- Oil or coolant contamination from internal engine wear poisoning the cat RareEstimated repair: $1,200– $3,500
- Cheap aftermarket catalytic converter that does not meet OEM efficiency OccasionalEstimated repair: $600– $1,800
How to diagnose this on a 2022 Toyota 4Runner
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Identify Bank 2 on this engine
Bank 2 is the cylinder bank that does not contain cylinder 1. On most transverse V6 engines (Honda, Toyota, Nissan) Bank 2 is the bank closer to the radiator. On longitudinal V8 engines like Ford modular, Bank 2 is the passenger side. Confirm in the service manual before replacing parts.
Tools: Vehicle-specific service information
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Pull all stored and pending codes
Address any misfire codes (P0300-series) or fuel trim codes (P0171, P0174) on Bank 2 first. They will continue to damage the catalyst until resolved.
Tools: OBD-II scan tool
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Inspect the Bank 2 exhaust for leaks
Cold-start the engine and listen along the Bank 2 manifold, header, flex pipe, and gasket seams. A leak upstream of the rear O2 sensor pulls in fresh air, mimics catalyst failure, and is far cheaper to repair than a converter.
Tools: Mechanic's stethoscope, Flashlight
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Graph upstream vs downstream O2 sensors on Bank 2
With the engine warmed up and held at 2000 RPM, graph the Bank 2 upstream O2 sensor (should switch rapidly between 0.1 V and 0.9 V) and the Bank 2 downstream O2 sensor (should stay relatively steady around 0.6–0.8 V). Downstream that mirrors upstream confirms catalyst loss.
Tools: Scan tool with graphing PIDs
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Rap-test the Bank 2 catalytic converter
Tap the converter body with a rubber mallet. A rattle confirms the ceramic substrate has broken apart. Visual inspection of the inlet and outlet through a flashlight beam can sometimes reveal melted cells.
Tools: Rubber mallet, Flashlight
Common fixes
- Replace the Bank 2 catalytic converter with an OEM or CARB-compliant unit
- Replace the Bank 2 downstream oxygen sensor
- Repair Bank 2 exhaust leaks
- Treat any underlying misfire or fuel trim condition before condemning the cat
About the 2020-2024 Toyota 4Runner
The 2020-2024 Toyota 4Runner was commonly sold with the following powertrains: 4.0L V6. Common trims include SR5, TRD Off-Road, TRD Pro, Limited.
Why P0420 and P0430 often appear together
If both bank codes set within days of each other on a high-mileage V-engine, the most likely explanation is that both converters have simply aged out together. A less common but worth-checking explanation is that the engine itself is producing higher hydrocarbon output across all cylinders — for example after timing chain stretch or compression loss — which is overworking both catalysts simultaneously.
Catalyst replacement: OEM vs. aftermarket vs. universal
OEM converters are expensive but reliably pass P0420/P0430 monitors and typically last another 150,000 miles. CARB-compliant aftermarket converters (required in California, Colorado, New York, and several other states) come close to OEM performance at 40–60 % of the price. Universal cheap converters sold without state certification frequently set P0430 again within 6–18 months and are also illegal in many jurisdictions.
What to fix before the catalyst
If P0430 has been present alongside any of these — repair them first: P0172 (rich Bank 1), P0175 (rich Bank 2), P0300-series (misfires), P0171 or P0174 (lean condition), or coolant in the exhaust (head gasket). Replacing the catalyst without fixing the root cause will destroy the new one within months.