P2187 on a 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe

System Too Lean at Idle (Bank 1)

P2187 on a 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe 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.

Severity: moderate Safe to drive (short term) Mid-size SUV 2020-2024 Hyundai Santa Fe

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What does P2187 mean on a 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe?

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 Hyundai Santa Fe generation — the symptoms, causes, and diagnostic steps below apply to every model year from 2020 through 2024.

Is it safe to drive a 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe with P2187?

In most cases a 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe 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 Hyundai Santa Fe?

What causes P2187 on a 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe?

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 Hyundai Santa Fe

  1. 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

  2. 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

  3. 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

  4. 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

  5. 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 Hyundai Santa Fe

Owner-reported safety complaints and official recalls filed with the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for the 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe. Use these to gauge how common a problem is on your specific vehicle before you start chasing Hyundai Santa Fe diagnostics.

176 owner complaints
7 involved a crash
1 involved a fire
2 reported injuries
  • POWER TRAIN 52
  • ENGINE 49
  • VEHICLE SPEED CONTROL 15
  • UNKNOWN OR OTHER 41
  • ELECTRICAL SYSTEM 25

5 active recalls

  • FUEL SYSTEM, GASOLINE:DELIVERY:HOSES, LINES/PIPING, AND FITTINGS Jul 2021

    Hyundai Motor America (Hyundai) is recalling certain 2021-2022 Santa Fe and Sonata vehicles equipped with 2.5L turbocharged engines. Fuel may leak at the pipe connection between the high-pressure fuel pump and fuel rail.…

    NHTSA campaign 21V524000
  • ENGINE AND ENGINE COOLING:ENGINE:GASOLINE:TURBO/SUPERCHARGER Mar 2022

    Hyundai Motor America (Hyundai) is recalling certain 2022 Santa Fe and Santa Cruz vehicles. The oil supply pipe to the turbocharger may crack, which could result in an oil leak in the engine compartment.…

    NHTSA campaign 22V197000
  • POWER TRAIN:AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION Oct 2022

    Hyundai Motor Company (Hyundai) is recalling certain 2021-2022 Santa Fe, Sonata, Veloster N, 2022 Santa Cruz, Elantra N, and Kona N vehicles. The vehicle's "fail-safe" limited-mobility drive mode may be impaired, when prompted by a transmission oil pump malfunction, which can re…

    NHTSA campaign 22V746000
  • TRAILER HITCHES Mar 2023

    Hyundai Motor America (Hyundai) is recalling certain 2019-2023 Santa Fe, 2021-2023 Santa Fe HEV, 2022-2023 Santa Fe Plug-in HEV and Santa Cruz vehicles potentially equipped with a tow hitch harness installed as original equipment, or purchased as an accessory through a Hyundai de…

    NHTSA campaign 23V181000

How do I fix P2187 on a 2022 Hyundai Santa Fe?

About the 2020-2024 Hyundai Santa Fe

The 2020-2024 Hyundai Santa Fe was commonly sold with the following powertrains: 2.5L I4, 2.5L Turbo I4, 1.6L Hybrid I4. Common trims include SE, SEL, XRT, Limited, Calligraphy.

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

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

Related diagnostic codes