AutoDTCs – OBD-II Trouble Code LookupAutoDTCs – OBD-II Trouble Code Lookup
  • Home
  • DTC Codes
    • Powertrain (P-Codes)
    • Body (B-Codes)
    • Chassis (C-Codes)
    • Network (U-Codes)
  • Diagnostic Guides
  • About
  • Brands
    • Toyota
    • Lexus
    • Hyundai
    • Kia
    • BYD
    • Skoda
    • Mitsubishi
    • Volvo
    • Nissan
    • Mercedes-Benz
    • Dodge
    • Suzuki
    • Honda
    • Volkswagen
    • Audi
    • Chrysler
    • Jeep
    • Ford
  • Contact
  • Home
  • DTC Codes
    • Powertrain (P-Codes)
    • Body (B-Codes)
    • Chassis (C-Codes)
    • Network (U-Codes)
  • Diagnostic Guides
  • About
  • Brands
    • Toyota
    • Lexus
    • Hyundai
    • Kia
    • BYD
    • Skoda
    • Mitsubishi
    • Volvo
    • Nissan
    • Mercedes-Benz
    • Dodge
    • Suzuki
    • Honda
    • Volkswagen
    • Audi
    • Chrysler
    • Jeep
    • Ford
  • Contact
Home / DTC Codes / Powertrain Systems (P-Codes) / P0458 – Evaporative Emission System Purge Control Valve Circuit Low

P0458 – Evaporative Emission System Purge Control Valve Circuit Low

DTC Data Sheet
SystemPowertrain
StandardSAE J2012 / ISO 15031-6
Fault typeCircuit Low
Official meaningEvaporative Emission System Purge Control Valve Circuit Low

Last updated: May 9, 2026

The PCM has detected a low-side fault on the EVAP purge control valve circuit — the signal is sitting below the expected voltage range, indicating a short to ground or open ground on the valve coil.

🔍Look up your vehicle's recalls, specs & safety ratings — free VIN decoder with NHTSA data

P0458 Quick Answer

The PCM has detected a low-side fault on the EVAP purge control valve circuit — the signal is sitting below the expected voltage range, indicating a short to ground or open ground on the valve coil. The first thing to check is engine oil level, condition, and viscosity — many P045-range faults are oil-driven before they are electrical.

What Does P0458 Mean?

Evaporative Emission System Purge Control Valve Circuit Low. The PCM has detected a low-side fault on the EVAP purge control valve circuit — the signal is sitting below the expected voltage range, indicating a short to ground or open ground on the valve coil.

Symptoms

  • Check engine light
  • Rarely any drivability symptoms
  • EVAP monitor will not run to completion (fails emissions readiness)
  • Possible fuel-cap-loose smell if purge valve is stuck open

Common Causes

  • Failed EVAP purge solenoid (internal short)
  • Wiring shorted to ground in the purge valve harness
  • Open ground or chassis-ground corrosion at the purge valve circuit
  • Damaged connector or backed-out terminal at the purge valve
  • PCM driver failure (rare)

Diagnosis Steps

You’ll need a scan tool capable of reading live powertrain data, a digital multimeter, and access to the wiring diagram for the specific platform.

  1. Locate the purge valve — usually mounted near the intake manifold or on the engine compartment side of the firewall.
  2. Disconnect the connector and measure resistance across the valve terminals (typical 22–30 ohms for most platforms).
  3. Resistance lower than spec confirms an internally shorted solenoid.
  4. With the valve disconnected, key on, back-probe the harness — should see 12 V on the supply pin.
  5. On the control pin, the PCM normally pulses ground; an unbroken short to ground here flags P0458.
  6. Wiggle-test the harness to expose chafing damage where the wire passes through pinch points.

Possible Fixes

  • Replace the EVAP purge valve solenoid
  • Repair shorted or chafed wiring in the purge circuit
  • Connector repair when terminals are damaged or oil-contaminated

Can I Still Drive With P0458?

The vehicle will usually still drive with P0458 stored, but performance and fuel economy are degraded. The fault disables or limits the affected actuator, and the PCM may inhibit emissions monitors. Drive to a workshop, but don’t ignore the code long-term — VVT and EVAP failures often cascade into related faults if left untreated.

How Serious Is This Code?

P0458 is a moderate-priority fault. It will not prevent the engine from running but will affect drivability, emissions, and over time can damage related components (cam phaser wear, catalytic converter on EVAP-related codes). Address within a few drive cycles.

Related Valve Evaporative Codes

Compare nearby valve evaporative trouble codes with similar definitions, fault patterns, and diagnostic paths.

  • P0459 – Evaporative Emission System Purge Control Valve Circuit High
  • P0498 – Evaporative Emission System Vent Valve Control Circuit Low
  • P0445 – Evaporative Emission System Purge Control Valve Circuit Shorted
  • P0444 – Evaporative Emission System Purge Control Valve Circuit Open
  • P0443 – Evaporative Emission System Purge Control Valve Circuit
  • P0499 – Evaporative Emission System Vent Valve Control Circuit High

FAQ

Will P0458 clear itself?

Only if the underlying fault was intermittent and self-corrected. Most P0458 root causes (failed solenoid, wiring damage, blocked screen) are persistent and require physical repair.

Can I clear P0458 without fixing it?

You can clear it with a scan tool, but it will return as soon as the fault condition reappears — typically within one or two drive cycles.

Is P0458 related to other codes?

Often, yes. Cam-position and EVAP faults frequently set adjacent codes — if P0458 is present, scan for related codes in the same range and address them as a group rather than one at a time.

Diagnostic Guides for This Code

In-depth step-by-step tutorials that pair with P0458.

  • Sensor Circuit High / Low CodesRead guide →
  • Read OBD-II Freeze Frame DataRead guide →
  • Why Low Voltage Cascades to Multi-DTCRead guide →

Free VIN Decoder

Free recalls, specs & safety ratings. NHTSA-sourced data — no signup.

Decode VIN →

Featured Guides
  • Fuel Trim: Short vs. Long Term
  • Diagnose Misfires (Scan Tool)
  • Diagnose EVAP Faults
  • CAN Bus: The 60-Ohm Rule
  • Test a Wheel Speed Sensor
  • Read Freeze Frame Data
Popular Codes
  • P0420 — Catalyst Efficiency
  • P0300 — Random Misfire
  • P0171 — System Lean (Bank 1)
  • P0455 — EVAP Large Leak
  • P0128 — Coolant Below Thermostat
  • U0121 — Lost Comm with ABS
  • C0040 — Wheel Speed Sensor (RR)
  • P0016 — Crank/Cam Correlation
All Categories
  • Steering Systems
  • Suzuki
  • Powertrain Systems (P-Codes
  • Suspension Systems
  • Ford
  • Body Systems (B-Codes
  • Wheels / Driveline
  • Volvo
  • Chassis Systems (C-Codes
  • CAN Bus / Network Communication
  • Audi
  • Network & Integration (U-Codes
  • Control Module Communication
  • Skoda
  • Engine & Powertrain
  • Vehicle Integration Systems
  • Jeep
  • Fuel & Air Metering
  • Volkswagen
  • Honda
  • Ignition & Misfire
  • Mitsubishi
  • Chrysler
  • Emission System
  • BYD
  • Chevrolet
  • Transmission
  • Toyota
  • GMC
  • Hybrid / EV Propulsion
  • Lexus
  • Ram
  • Cooling Systems
  • Mercedes-Benz
  • Body / Comfort & Interior
  • Dodge
  • Airbag / SRS
  • Kia
  • Climate Control / HVAC
  • Hyundai
  • ABS / Traction / Stability
  • Nissan
Powertrain Systems
  • Engine & Powertrain
  • Fuel & Air Metering
  • Ignition & Misfire
  • Emission System
More Systems
  • Transmission
  • Hybrid / EV Propulsion
  • Cooling Systems
  • Body / Comfort & Interior
Safety & Chassis
  • Airbag / SRS
  • Climate Control / HVAC
  • ABS / Traction / Stability
  • Steering Systems
Chassis & Network
  • Suspension Systems
  • Wheels / Driveline
  • CAN Bus / Network Communication
  • Control Module Communication
  • © 2026 AutoDTCs.com. Accurate OBD-II DTC Explanations for All Makes & Models. About · Contact · Privacy Policy · Disclaimer