P0456 on a 2017 Kia Sportage

EVAP Very Small Leak Detected

P0456 on a 2017 Kia Sportage indicates evap very small leak detected. It usually stays drivable short-term but should be diagnosed promptly. The most common cause is worn fuel cap o-ring or wrong-spec cap (typically $15–$60). Confirm the root cause before replacing parts.

Severity: low Safe to drive (short term) Compact SUV 2015-2019 Kia Sportage

Reviewed by MECH AI Editorial · Last verified

What does P0456 mean on a 2017 Kia Sportage?

P0456 is set when the EVAP system's very-small-leak monitor detects an opening approximately 0.020 inches (0.5 mm) or larger. This is finer than P0442 (0.040") and significantly harder to find — it can be a single pinhole, a hardened O-ring, or a hairline crack in a plastic component. The vehicle drives normally and there is rarely any fuel smell.

This guide covers P0456 across the 2015-2019 Kia Sportage generation — the symptoms, causes, and diagnostic steps below apply to every model year from 2015 through 2019.

Is it safe to drive a 2017 Kia Sportage with P0456?

In most cases a 2017 Kia Sportage stays drivable for short trips with P0456 active, but diagnose and repair it promptly. This is a low-severity code — ignoring it can lead to further damage or a failed emissions test.

What are the symptoms of P0456 on a 2017 Kia Sportage?

What causes P0456 on a 2017 Kia Sportage?

Cause Likelihood Estimated repair (USD)
Worn fuel cap O-ring or wrong-spec cap Most common $15–$60
Aged or cracked EVAP hose elbows and quick-connect O-rings Common $30–$200
Hairline crack in the charcoal canister body Common $200–$600
Leaking EVAP purge valve seat (small internal leak only) Occasional $80–$300
Fuel tank pressure sensor O-ring hardened Occasional $30–$150
Pinhole at the fuel tank top — visible only with smoke or dye Rare $300–$1,200

How to diagnose this on a 2017 Kia Sportage

  1. Replace the fuel cap with a fresh OEM-spec cap

    A 0.020" leak at the cap costs $30 to rule out. Hand-tighten until the cap clicks at least 3 times. Drive several drive cycles so the monitor reruns. Many P0456 codes never come back after this step.

    Tools: None

  2. Smoke-test at the lowest pressure your machine supports

    P0456 leaks are at the threshold of what smoke machines can find. Use the lowest pressure setting (0.5 psi or less). Let smoke build for 10 minutes. Inspect every quick-connect, O-ring, hose elbow, and canister seam with strong light. UV dye in the smoke fluid helps trace very faint trails.

    Tools: EVAP smoke machine with UV dye, UV flashlight, Magnification glass

  3. Read mode 6 EVAP test results

    Mode 6 will show the recorded leak-decay rate from the last test. If the failure threshold is just barely exceeded, the leak is at the very small end — often a hardened O-ring or aged plastic. If the threshold is wildly exceeded, P0455 would normally set instead; P0456 with a large mode-6 deviation suggests the monitor calibration is off.

    Tools: Scan tool with mode 6 support

  4. Test the purge valve for an internal leak

    Apply vacuum to the inlet side of the purge valve with the valve de-energized — it should hold vacuum indefinitely. A valve that slowly leaks vacuum is allowing fuel vapor through during engine-off, which the monitor sees as a system leak.

    Tools: Hand vacuum pump

  5. Verify the readiness monitor before re-testing

    After any P0456 repair, drive 4–6 cold-start cycles with the tank between 25 % and 75 % full. Confirm the EVAP readiness monitor shows "complete" on the scan tool. A vehicle that passes a state smog test with the monitor "not ready" will not actually pass — most states fail vehicles with incomplete monitors.

    Tools: Scan tool with readiness display

NHTSA complaints & recalls for the 2017 Kia Sportage

Owner-reported safety complaints and official recalls filed with the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for the 2017 Kia Sportage. Use these to gauge how common a problem is on your specific vehicle before you start chasing Kia Sportage diagnostics.

387 owner complaints
14 involved a crash
25 involved a fire
18 reported injuries
  • ENGINE 211
  • POWER TRAIN 40
  • UNKNOWN OR OTHER 68
  • ELECTRICAL SYSTEM 61
  • SERVICE BRAKES 24

4 active recalls

  • FUEL SYSTEM, GASOLINE:DELIVERY:HOSES, LINES/PIPING, AND FITTINGS Dec 2018

    Kia Motors America (Kia) is recalling certain 2011-2017 Optima, 2012-2017 Sorento and 2011-2018 Sportage vehicles that previously received an engine replacement under recall number 17V-224, warranty, or the Knock Sensor Detection System (KSDS) Product Improvement Campaign. The h…

    NHTSA campaign 18V907000
  • SERVICE BRAKES, HYDRAULIC:ANTILOCK/TRACTION CONTROL/ELECTRONIC LIMITED SLIP:CONTROL UNIT/MODULE Mar 2021

    Kia Motors America (Kia) is recalling certain 2017-2021 Sportage and Cadenza vehicles. The electrical circuit in the Hydraulic Electronic Control Unit (HECU) may short-circuit, which can cause a fire in the engine compartment.…

    NHTSA campaign 21V137000
  • TRAILER HITCHES Nov 2016

    Kia Motors America (Kia) is recalling certain model year 2016-2017 Sorento vehicles manufactured October 27, 2014, to August 25, 2016, and 2017 Sportage vehicles manufactured December 10, 2015, to August 26, 2016. The affected vehicles are equipped with an accessory trailer hitc…

    NHTSA campaign 16V862000
  • 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 P0456 on a 2017 Kia Sportage?

About the 2015-2019 Kia Sportage

The 2015-2019 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 P0456 is the hardest EVAP code to diagnose

A 0.020-inch leak is roughly the size of a sewing needle hole. At atmospheric pressure that is essentially invisible. The only practical way to find it is with a smoke machine, UV dye, and patience — every joint, every gasket, every plastic seam. Shops typically charge a $100–$200 diagnostic fee for P0456 because the inspection takes 30–60 minutes even when you find the leak quickly.

P0456 vs. P0442

Same EVAP system, different leak-size threshold:

A vehicle that previously set P0442 and now sets P0456 has had a leak get smaller — usually because someone tightened a cap or replaced a hose but missed the real source.

When the code keeps coming back

If P0456 returns within 30 days of a repair, the leak was not actually fixed — the monitor simply did not run again in the interim. Common overlooked sources: the spare-tire-mounted tank vent on certain trucks, the canister filter housing, and the seam where the fuel tank meets the filler neck on rust-belt vehicles.

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