Toyota Corolla P0171: System Too Lean (Bank 1)
TL;DR
Toyota Corolla P0171 (lean): usually a dirty MAF sensor or a vacuum/PCV leak. Clean the MAF first. Check fuel trims at idle vs load. Shop cost: $120–$450.
Why Toyota Corolla owners get P0171
Corolla engines are reliable, so P0171 typically points to a cleanable MAF or a small intake/PCV leak rather than a major fault. A leak shows worse trims at idle; fuel-delivery issues show worse trims under load — use that to target the fix.
Most likely causes on the Corolla
| Likely cause | Probability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Dirty MAF sensor | 40% | Clean first |
| Vacuum / PCV / intake leak | 35% | |
| Low fuel pressure | 15% | |
| Faulty O2 sensor | 10% |
Toyota Corolla-specific known issues
- Corolla MAF sensors usually respond to cleaning — try it before replacing.
- Inspect the PCV valve and hoses; a small leak there is a frequent lean source.
- Use only MAF-specific cleaner.
Toyota Corolla P0171 repair cost
| Typical shop cost (Corolla) | $120–$450 |
|---|---|
| DIY range (generic) | $0–$400 |
Ranges vary by region, engine and parts grade.
Owner tips
- Clean the MAF sensor as a near-free first step.
- Note whether the lean trim is worse at idle (leak) or load (fuel).
- Replace an original high-mileage PCV valve if it rattles.
Full P0171 diagnostic guide
For the complete step-by-step diagnosis, all causes, and repair walkthrough that applies to every vehicle, see the main guide: P0171 — System Too Lean (Bank 1).
Toyota Corolla P0171 — FAQ
Will cleaning the MAF fix P0171 on a Corolla?
Often yes — a dirty MAF is a common Corolla cause and cleaning it resolves many cases cheaply.
What else causes P0171 on a Corolla?
A vacuum or PCV leak is next most common, then low fuel pressure or a faulty O2 sensor.
Is P0171 safe to drive with on my Corolla?
Short-term yes, but fix it promptly; a sustained lean condition runs hot.