Home / DTC / P0127 — Intake Air Temperature Too High

P0127 — Intake Air Temperature Too High

Detailed page for trouble code P0127.

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Code

P0127

Generic P — Powertrain

Intake Air Temperature Too High

Brand: Generic
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Page language: EN

Causes

  • Faulty or contaminated IAT sensor
  • Damaged wiring or poor connector (open, short to power, short to ground, corrosion)
  • Intake air heated by nearby engine/exhaust components or turbo heat soak
  • Incorrect sensor installation or incorrect replacement part
  • ECM/software fault or intermittent wiring harness damage

Symptoms

  • Check Engine Light (MIL) illuminated
  • Engine runs richer than normal, black smoke or fuel smell possible
  • Reduced fuel economy
  • Poor idle or hesitation on acceleration
  • Cold-start performance may appear normal then degrade as intake warms

What to check

  • Scan for P0127 and related codes; record freeze-frame and live IAT PID data
  • Compare IAT PID to ambient air temperature and engine coolant temperature — expect IAT near ambient when vehicle is at rest
  • Visually inspect IAT sensor and connector for corrosion, contamination, damage, or improper installation
  • Inspect intake ducting near the sensor for heat sources (exhaust manifold, turbocharger, engine accessory heat)
  • Backprobe sensor connector to check reference voltage and ground presence with ignition on
  • Perform wiggle test on harness while monitoring live IAT PID for intermittent changes

Signal parameters

  • Typical IAT signal range: ~0.2–4.8 V (system-dependent)
  • Thermistor behavior: resistance usually decreases as temperature increases (NTC) — consult service manual for exact resistance vs temperature table
  • Live PID should track ambient temperature within reasonable limits (within ~5–10°C when vehicle is stationary and at ambient)
  • No open-circuit (infinite resistance) or short-to-voltage should be present on harness

Diagnostic algorithm

  1. Connect a scan tool, read stored codes and freeze-frame. Note related sensors (MAF, ECT) and conditions when fault set.
  2. Visually inspect IAT sensor, mounting, and intake ducting for heat sources, contamination, or damage.
  3. With ignition ON (engine OFF), backprobe the IAT connector: verify reference voltage (if applicable), signal voltage, and good ground per vehicle manual.
  4. Measure IAT sensor resistance and compare to the vehicle-specific resistance vs temperature table; warm or cool the sensor while watching resistance change. Replace if out of spec.
  5. If signal voltage is higher than expected, check for short to battery voltage in the harness; disconnect the sensor — if voltage persists on signal wire, repair wiring to ECM.
  6. Check continuity and insulation between signal, power, and ground circuits and to the ECM; repair any opens/shorts.
  7. Inspect intake routing and shield or re-route sensor away from heat sources if actual intake air is being heated abnormally.
  8. Replace IAT sensor and/or repair wiring as required. Clear codes, perform road test and verify IAT PID returns to expected values and code does not recur.
  9. If fault persists after sensor and wiring repairs, test or reflash ECM per manufacturer procedures and consider ECM replacement only after ruling out harness and sensor faults.

Likely causes

  • Failed IAT thermistor (out-of-spec resistance)
  • Connector corrosion or bent pins causing high voltage reading
  • Short to battery voltage on the IAT signal (sensor sees higher voltage)
  • Intake air ducting routing allows excessive heat soak into the sensor location
  • Aftermarket intake or heat shielding removed, exposing sensor to elevated temperatures

Fault status

⚠️ Status
ECM detected intake air temperature signal higher than expected; fault stored and MIL set.
🟡 Repair difficulty: Medium
⏱️ Diagnostic time: 0.5-2.0 hours
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