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Home / DTC Codes / Powertrain Systems (P-Codes) / GMC Sierra 1500 P0420 — Catalyst Efficiency Bank 1

GMC Sierra 1500 P0420 — Catalyst Efficiency Bank 1

GMC logoGMC-specific code — factory diagnostic data
DTC Data Sheet
CodeP0420
VehicleGMC Sierra 1500 (2007-2019)
Engine4.8L / 5.3L / 6.2L V8 (LS-family, Vortec, Gen-IV)
SystemEMISSION SYSTEM
Fault typePerformance
Official meaningCatalyst System Efficiency Below Threshold (Bank 1)

Last updated: May 14, 2026

Definition source: GMC factory description. Diagnostic guidance is based on factory-defined fault logic for this code.

🔍Decode any GMC Sierra 1500 VIN — free recalls, specs & safety ratings — free VIN decoder with NHTSA data

⚠ Scan tool requirement: This is a GMC-specific code. A generic OBD2 reader will retrieve the code but cannot access the module-level data, live PIDs, or bi-directional tests needed for diagnosis. A professional-grade scan tool with GMC coverage is required for complete diagnosis.

↗Looking for the cross-vehicle definition? Read the generic P0420 article for the SAE-defined fault logic that applies to all manufacturers.

P0420 Quick Answer

The Sierra 1500 shares the GMT900 and K2XX platforms (and the 5.3L LC9 / L83 engine) with the Chevy Silverado, so P0420 root causes are identical: a lazy or oil-fouled downstream O2 sensor first, followed by a cracked driver-side exhaust manifold, AFM oil consumption, and only then the catalyst itself. Genuine cat failure typically appears past 180k miles.

What Does P0420 Mean on a GMC Sierra 1500?

The GMC Sierra 1500 (2007-2019) stores P0420 when the PCM detects the condition described above. This guide focuses on the 4.8L / 5.3L / 6.2L V8 (LS-family, Vortec, Gen-IV) — the most common configuration on this platform. Diagnostic priorities and likely root causes differ from the generic SAE definition because of platform-specific failure patterns documented below.

Symptoms

  • Check Engine Light (P0420)
  • No driveability symptoms in most cases
  • 1-2 MPG fuel economy drop
  • Faint sulfur (rotten-egg) smell under load
  • Cold-start tick if manifold is cracked
  • OBD-II inspection failure

Common Causes (Most Likely on This Model First)

Same chassis, same engines, same failure modes as the Silverado 1500. Diagnostic order for a Sierra 1500 P0420:

  1. Bank 1 Sensor 2 (downstream) O2 sensor lazy or contaminated. Sees high sustained heat on the driver side. After 90k-120k miles it loses switching speed; PCM interprets sluggishness as catalyst storage loss. Replace this first — it solves the majority of Sierra P0420s.
  2. Oil-fouled O2 sensors from AFM oil consumption. 5.3L LC9 (2007-2013) and L83 (2014-2019) burn oil through deactivated cylinders. The ash coats the sensors.
  3. Cracked driver-side exhaust manifold. Same manifold as the Silverado — same crack point near the head flange on 2007-2013 5.3L trucks.
  4. Intake manifold gasket coolant ingestion. GM bulletin 07-06-04-016B covers Gen-IV upper intake gaskets allowing coolant into combustion. Coolant ruins O2 sensors.
  5. Actual cat failure. Usually 180k+ miles. CARB-compliant replacement is required to reliably pass the OE catalyst monitor — generic universal cats commonly re-trigger P0420.

Diagnostic Approach

  1. Read freeze frame. Note LTFT B1 — if positive, address the lean condition first; running lean damages catalysts.
  2. Live-data B1S1 and B1S2. S1 should switch 0.1V-0.9V at warm idle. S2 should be flat around 0.7V. If S2 mirrors S1, the cat is genuinely failed.
  3. B1S2 switching frequency at steady cruise: > 0.5/sec = bad cat; < 0.1/sec = sensor problem or healthy cat.
  4. Inspect driver-side exhaust manifold for cracks near cylinder 1 or 3 (2007-2013 in particular).
  5. On AFM trucks at 100k+: pull upstream O2 and check for oil contamination. Heavy contamination means new sensors are wasted unless oil consumption is addressed.
  6. Only replace the cat after sensors and exhaust integrity are confirmed. Use GM-OE or CARB-compliant aftermarket.

Possible Fixes

FixWhen
Replace B1S2 downstream O2Sensor > 100k miles or B1S2 voltage doesn’t stay flat at cruise
Replace driver-side exhaust manifoldCrack visible or cold-start tick on 2007-2013 5.3L
Both upstream O2 sensorsOil contamination on threads
AFM-delete kitDocumented > 1 qt / 3,000 miles oil consumption
Catalytic converter (Bank 1, OE or CARB-compliant)Only after sensors and exhaust integrity verified

Can I Still Drive With P0420?

Yes — no driveability impact. The Sierra will run normally with P0420 active. The real concern is the underlying cause continuing to degrade — oil consumption, exhaust leak, or coolant ingestion will eventually cause additional, more expensive problems.

How Serious Is This Code?

Low. The code is emissions-related, but it commonly hides a more meaningful issue on AFM Sierras (AFM oil consumption, manifold crack). Diagnose the chain, don’t just clear the symptom.

Repair Costs

RepairEstimated cost (parts + labor)
Downstream O2 sensor replacement$120 – $240
Driver-side exhaust manifold + gaskets$380 – $720
All 4 O2 sensors$320 – $580
Catalytic converter (Bank 1)$650 – $1,400
AFM-delete kit$1,200 – $2,800

Related Catalyst Efficiency Codes

Compare nearby Gmc catalyst efficiency trouble codes with similar definitions, fault patterns, and diagnostic paths.

  • P0420 – Honda Accord P0420 — Catalyst Efficiency Bank 1
  • P0455 – GMC Sierra 1500 P0455 — EVAP Large Leak

FAQ

Is P0420 on a GMC Sierra always the catalytic converter?

No. On the 5.3L Sierra the cat is the LAST suspect. The downstream O2 sensor (B1S2) is the actual decision-maker for the catalyst monitor, and a lazy sensor will throw P0420 on a perfectly healthy cat. Replace the sensor first and re-test.

How much does it cost to fix P0420 on a Sierra 1500?

Best case (downstream O2 sensor): $120-$240. If the driver-side exhaust manifold is cracked (common on 2007-2013): $380-$720. Catalytic converter replacement runs $650-$1,400 per side. The cheap universal cats are a false economy — they tend to re-throw P0420 within months.

Does the AFM problem cause P0420 on Sierras?

Yes, indirectly. AFM-equipped 5.3L Sierras (2007-2019) burn oil through deactivated cylinders, and that oil ash contaminates both O2 sensors and the catalyst over time. AFM-delete is the only permanent fix.

Is the Sierra P0420 the same as the Silverado P0420?

Essentially identical. The Sierra 1500 and Silverado 1500 share the GMT900 / K2XX chassis and the same engine families. P0420 root causes, diagnostic procedure, and fix costs are the same on both trucks.

Diagnostic Guides for This Code

In-depth step-by-step tutorials that pair with P0420.

  • Fuel Trim: Short vs. Long TermRead guide →
  • Read OBD-II Freeze Frame DataRead guide →
  • OBD-II Readiness MonitorsRead guide →

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