Diagnostic code
P0305 Code: Cylinder 5 misfire
P0305 points to cylinder 5 misfire in the misfire system. The first diagnostic branch usually separates worn spark plug or ignition coil; fuel injector flow problem; vacuum leak affecting that cylinder. Start with confirm whether the check
Educational reference only, not professional repair advice. A fault code is a starting point, not a diagnosis. Vehicle symptoms, live data, service history, and manufacturer-specific procedures change the repair path. If the check engine light is flashing, the vehicle is overheating, brakes or steering feel unsafe, fuel odor or smoke appears, or the engine is running poorly, stop driving when safe and get professional help.
Sources
Safety limits for this page
Use this page as a reference only. Do not perform hazardous repairs from a web guide. Stop when safe and contact a qualified mechanic if any warning condition below applies.
- Opening fuel lines, fuel tanks, or pressurized fuel components
- Flashing check engine light
- Overheating, smoke, or strong fuel smell
- Loss of power, severe shaking, unsafe braking, or unsafe steering
- Fuel odor, visible leak, smoke, or hard starting after refueling
Can I drive?
A short local trip may be possible if the vehicle runs normally and the check engine light is solid. Avoid highway driving, towing, hard acceleration, or ignore-the-light driving until P0305 is diagnosed, especially if rough running, overheating, fuel smell, or power loss appears.
Repair range
$100-$1,800
Scanner note
OBD-II scanner with freeze-frame data and live misfire counters if available
Plain-English Meaning
P0305 points to cylinder 5 misfire in the misfire system. The first diagnostic branch usually separates worn spark plug or ignition coil; fuel injector flow problem; vacuum leak affecting that cylinder. Start with confirm whether the check engine light is flashing; read freeze-frame data and all companion misfire codes, then compare the result with freeze-frame data and companion codes before approving parts.
Common Causes
Common possibilities (most common first):
- Worn spark plug or ignition coil
- Fuel injector flow problem
- Vacuum leak affecting that cylinder
- Low compression or valve sealing issue
- Wiring or connector fault in the ignition or injector circuit
Order varies by make, model, mileage, and operating conditions. Do not replace parts based only on this list — verify with a scan tool and qualified mechanic.
Symptoms
- Flashing or solid check engine light
- Rough idle or shaking
- Hesitation under load
- Fuel smell or lower fuel economy
Diagnostic Steps
- 1Confirm whether the check engine light is flashing
- 2Read freeze-frame data and all companion misfire codes
- 3Inspect spark plug, coil, and boot condition
- 4Check injector command and fuel delivery for the affected cylinder
- 5Have a qualified shop run compression or leak-down testing if ignition and fuel checks pass.
Confusable And Related Codes
P0300
Compare →P0300 means the engine is misfiring randomly or across multiple cylinders instead of one clearly identified cylinder. Ignition, fuel, air leaks, compression problems, or timing issues can all interrupt combustion and trigger this code.
P0301
Compare →P0301 means cylinder 1 is not burning its air-fuel mixture consistently. The problem may be isolated to that cylinder, such as a spark plug, coil, injector, compression issue, or local air leak near the intake runner.
P0302
Compare →P0302 means cylinder 2 is misfiring enough for the engine computer to identify it. The cause may be electrical, fuel-related, mechanical, or an air leak that affects that cylinder more than the others.
P0303
Compare →P0303 means cylinder 3 has a repeat misfire pattern. A technician will usually confirm the cylinder location, inspect ignition parts, check injector behavior, and rule out compression or valve problems before replacing parts.
FAQ
What does P0305 mean in plain English?
P0305 means the computer saw a cylinder 5 misfire. It identifies the system to test first, not a guaranteed failed part.
Can I drive with P0305?
Possibly for a short local trip if the vehicle runs normally and the light is solid. Stop driving if the light flashes, the engine overheats, power drops, or strong fuel smell appears.
Is P0305 always caused by one part?
No. Several electrical, sensor, airflow, fuel, mechanical, or wiring issues can set the same code, so testing should confirm the cause before parts are replaced.
This page is educational and is not a substitute for hands-on vehicle diagnosis.