P2187 on a 2022 Honda Pilot
System Too Lean at Idle (Bank 1)
P2187 on a 2022 Honda Pilot indicates system too lean at idle (bank 1). It usually stays drivable short-term but should be diagnosed promptly. The most common cause is vacuum leak (intake gasket, brake-booster hose, pcv, throttle-body gasket) (typically $80–$600). Confirm the root cause before replacing parts.
What does P2187 mean on a 2022 Honda Pilot?
P2187 is set when long-term fuel trim on Bank 1 goes excessively positive (typically beyond +20 %) specifically at idle, but stays closer to normal at part-throttle and cruise. The distinctive pattern — lean only at idle — almost always points at a vacuum leak rather than a fueling problem. At idle, intake manifold vacuum is at its highest, which amplifies the effect of any leak; off-idle, the leak path becomes a smaller fraction of total airflow and trims look fine.
This guide covers P2187 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 P2187?
In most cases a 2022 Honda Pilot stays drivable for short trips with P2187 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 P2187 on a 2022 Honda Pilot?
- Check Engine Light is illuminated
- Rough or unstable idle, especially when warm
- Possible hesitation or stumble immediately off-idle
- Stalling at idle (worst cases)
- Slight reduction in fuel economy
- May be paired with P0171 (general lean Bank 1) if the leak is large
- No drivability issue at cruise
What causes P2187 on a 2022 Honda Pilot?
| Cause | Likelihood | Estimated repair (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Vacuum leak (intake gasket, brake-booster hose, PCV, throttle-body gasket) P2187 is essentially "lean at idle = vacuum leak" until proven otherwise. | Most common | $80–$600 |
| Stuck-open EVAP purge valve introducing fuel vapor unmanaged | Common | $80–$300 |
| Cracked plastic intake manifold (Ford 4.6/5.4, Chrysler 4.0, GM 3.6) | Common | $250–$900 |
| Failing PCV valve or hose | Common | $30–$200 |
| Failed or biased Bank 1 upstream O2 sensor | Occasional | $150–$450 |
| Throttle body gasket leak | Occasional | $30–$200 |
| Carbon-coked throttle body letting blade hold slightly open | Occasional | $20–$200 |
How to diagnose this on a 2022 Honda Pilot
-
Compare idle vs cruise fuel trims
Read Bank 1 LTFT at idle and at 2500 RPM cruise. P2187 with LTFT around +20 % at idle but near zero at cruise is the classic vacuum-leak signature. P2187 with high trim at all RPMs is a broader lean condition (likely P0171 alongside).
Tools: Scan tool with live PIDs
-
Smoke-test the intake comprehensively
Pressurize the intake with smoke through the throttle body. Watch every gasket, hose, vacuum tee, the brake booster line, the PCV system, the EVAP purge line, and any unused vacuum ports. The leak path is somewhere in there.
Tools: EVAP / intake smoke machine, Flashlight and mirror
-
Inspect the PCV system
The PCV system is a common P2187 cause — particularly the hose from the valve cover to the intake. Aged rubber cracks and PCV valves stick open. Pull the valve and shake — it should rattle. A non-rattling PCV is finished.
Tools: Common hand tools
-
Disconnect the EVAP purge to test
With the engine warm and idling, disconnect the purge valve. If the rough idle smooths out and LTFT drops, the purge valve was stuck open. P2187 + idle improvement on purge disconnect = purge valve.
Tools: Hose disconnect tools
-
Inspect the brake booster hose
A failing brake booster diaphragm or hose is the single most overlooked P2187 cause. Pull the brake-booster line off and cap the manifold port. If idle smooths out, the booster or its hose is the leak.
Tools: Hose plug or vacuum cap
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 P2187 on a 2022 Honda Pilot?
- Repair vacuum leak(s) found by smoke test
- Replace the EVAP purge valve
- Replace cracked plastic intake manifold (model-specific)
- Replace the PCV valve and hose
- Repair brake booster vacuum leak
- Replace the upstream O2 sensor if biased
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.
Why “lean at idle but not at cruise” points at a vacuum leak
The size of any intake vacuum leak is fixed — say, 5 grams per minute of air. At idle, the engine consumes maybe 15 g/s of air total. The leak represents a big fraction of that total, so fuel trim has to add fuel aggressively to compensate. At cruise the engine consumes 100+ g/s of air; the same leak is now proportionally tiny and trim looks normal.
This is why P2187 specifically (lean at idle) is so reliably a vacuum leak diagnosis — far more so than the broader P0171 which could also be fuel-side problems.
P2187 vs P0171
- P0171 — general system too lean Bank 1. Sets when LTFT runs high across operating conditions. Could be vacuum leak, fuel pressure, MAF, or sensor.
- P2187 — specifically lean at idle. Sets when LTFT runs high at idle but not elsewhere. Strongly points at vacuum leak.
If both codes set together, the vacuum leak is large enough to affect cruise trim too. If only P2187 sets, the leak is small.
Common P2187-prone vehicles
- Ford 4.6 / 5.4 modular V8 — cracked plastic intake manifold
- Chrysler 3.6 Pentastar — intake gasket, PCV system
- GM 3.6 LFX / LLT V6 — PCV diaphragm in valve cover failure
- Honda K-series — IACV gasket, vacuum tee at brake booster
- Toyota 2GR-FE — throttle body gasket
- Most vehicles 10+ years old — hardened brake-booster hose