P0141: O2 Sensor Heater Circuit Malfunction (Bank 1, Sensor 2)

Severity: low System: Emissions System Can drive: yes
Quick answer: P0141 means the heater circuit in the downstream oxygen sensor (Bank 1, Sensor 2 — after the catalytic converter) isn’t working. This sensor mainly monitors converter efficiency, so the car drives normally, but you will fail emissions. The usual cause is a failed downstream O2 sensor, occasionally a fuse or wiring fault.

TL;DR

P0141 = downstream O2 sensor heater circuit fault (Bank 1, Sensor 2). Severity: low. Safe to drive; fails emissions. Top cause: failed O2 sensor (70%); also fuse/wiring. Fix: $50–$250 DIY.

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Can I keep driving with P0141?

Yes.

IF you have P0141 → drive normally; this sensor does not control fueling, so there is little performance or economy impact. The main consequence is failing an emissions test, so repair it before testing.

Symptoms

  • Check engine light on
  • Failed emissions test
  • Little or no change in how the car drives
  • Sometimes a slight fuel-economy effect

Top causes (ranked by probability)

Likely causeProbabilityNotes
Failed downstream oxygen sensor (heater element)
70%
Most common
Blown O2 heater fuse
15%
Check first — cheap
Wiring/connector fault
15%

What does P0141 mean?

Technical explanation

The downstream (post-catalyst) oxygen sensor on Bank 1 has a heater element the ECM monitors. When the heater-circuit current is out of range, P0141 is set. Because this sensor is used to judge catalytic-converter efficiency rather than to control fueling, drivability is unaffected, but emissions monitors will not pass.

In simple terms

The oxygen sensor after your catalytic converter has a built-in heater. P0141 means that heater isn’t working. The car drives fine, but it’ll fail an emissions test until the sensor is replaced.

How to diagnose P0141 (step by step)

  1. Confirm sensor location. Bank 1 Sensor 2 is the downstream sensor after the catalytic converter on the cylinder-1 bank.
  2. Check the O2 heater fuse. Replace a blown fuse and re-test before anything else.
  3. Inspect wiring/connector. Check for heat damage or corrosion near the exhaust.
  4. Measure heater resistance. Out-of-spec resistance confirms a bad sensor.
  5. Replace the sensor. Fit an OEM-grade downstream O2 sensor.
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Repair options & cost

  • Replace the downstream (Bank 1, Sensor 2) oxygen sensor
  • Replace the blown fuse
  • Repair wiring/connector
DIY cost$50–$250
Workshop cost$150–$400
Repair time30–60 min (sensor); minutes (fuse)

Costs are local ballpark ranges and vary by region and vehicle.

Tools you’ll need

  • OBD-II scanner (BlueDriver / ANCEL)
  • O2 sensor socket
  • Multimeter
Scan your car: recommended OBD-II scanners →

Vehicle-specific notes

  • The downstream sensor is usually easier to reach than the upstream one.
  • Use an OEM-grade sensor for reliability.
  • Check the shared O2 heater fuse before buying parts.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Replacing the upstream sensor by mistake
  • Skipping the fuse check
  • Using a cheap sensor
  • Assuming it affects performance (it mostly doesn’t)

Frequently asked questions

Is P0141 safe to drive with?

Yes. The downstream sensor does not control fueling, so the car drives normally. You will fail emissions until it is fixed.

What causes P0141?

Most often a failed downstream O2 sensor heater element, then a blown fuse or wiring fault.

What is the difference between P0135 and P0141?

Both are O2 heater faults on Bank 1: P0135 is the upstream sensor (Sensor 1), P0141 is the downstream sensor (Sensor 2).

P0141 summary

MeaningO2 heater circuit fault (Bank 1, Sensor 2)
SeverityLow
Safe to drive?Yes
Top causeFailed O2 sensor (70%)
DIY cost$50–$250
Shop cost$150–$400
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