P0306: Cylinder 6 Misfire Detected
What Does P0306 Mean?
P0306 is a diagnostic trouble code indicating: Cylinder 6 Misfire Detected. This code relates to the ignition system system. It has been reported in NHTSA complaints across 22 different vehicle models.
The ECU detects cylinder-specific misfires by monitoring crankshaft acceleration patterns. Each time a cylinder fires, the crankshaft accelerates slightly. When a specific cylinder consistently fails to produce that acceleration, the ECU identifies it. A flashing check engine light during misfires means the catalytic converter is at risk of damage from unburned fuel. Cylinder-specific misfire codes are actually easier to diagnose than random misfires (P0300) because you can use the swap test to isolate the failing component.
The ECU detects misfires by monitoring crankshaft acceleration patterns using the crankshaft position sensor. Each time a cylinder fires, it produces a small acceleration of the crankshaft. When a cylinder fails to fire, the crankshaft actually decelerates slightly during that cylinder's power stroke. The ECU can identify which cylinder misfired based on the timing of the deceleration. A flashing check engine light during active misfires is an emergency β it means the misfire rate is high enough to damage the catalytic converter. Raw, unburned fuel from misfiring cylinders enters the converter, causing it to overheat (temperatures can exceed 1800Β°F, versus normal 800-1200Β°F). Common affected vehicles: Any vehicle, but misfires are especially common in: Toyota (ignition coil failures on 4-cylinder engines), Honda (valve adjustment issues causing misfires), GM (AFM/DOD lifter failures causing single-cylinder misfires), Ford (coil-on-plug failures).
**Step-by-Step Diagnosis for Cylinder 6 Misfire:** (1) The swap test is your best friend: move the spark plug AND ignition coil from cylinder 6 to another cylinder (e.g., cylinder 1 if testing cylinder 6). Clear codes and run the engine. If the misfire moves to the new cylinder, you've identified the bad component (plug or coil). If it stays on cylinder 6, the problem is mechanical: injector, compression, or valve issue. (2) Pull the spark plug from cylinder 6 β its condition tells a story. Wet/fuel-fouled (black, wet) = ignition failure or dead injector. Oil-fouled (oily black) = worn valve seals or piston rings. White/blistered = lean condition or overheating. Normal (light tan/gray) = good combustion. (3) If the swap test is inconclusive, perform a compression test on cylinder 6 and compare to other cylinders. All should be within 10% of each other. Low compression on cylinder 6 indicates a valve, ring, or head gasket issue. (4) Check the fuel injector: swap it with another cylinder's injector and see if the misfire moves. You can also use a mechanic's stethoscope to listen for clicking (no click = dead injector).
**Common Cylinder 6 Misfire Causes by Vehicle:** Toyota 4-cylinder (1AZ/2AZ/2AR): ignition coil failures are extremely common β replace the coil ($25-$80) and plug together. Honda K24: valve adjustment is critical β misfires from tight valves are common if adjustment hasn't been done at 100K-mile intervals. GM 5.3L V8: cylinder 6 misfires in Active Fuel Management (AFM) equipped engines may indicate a collapsed AFM lifter β a known issue requiring lifter replacement ($1500-$3000). Ford 4.6L/5.4L: coil-on-plug failures are extremely common β the boots crack and allow arcing to the plug tube.
Symptoms of P0306
- β οΈ check engine light (may flash)
- β οΈ rough idle
- β οΈ loss of power
- β οΈ engine vibration
Common Causes
- π Faulty spark plug cylinder 6
- π Bad ignition coil cylinder 6
- π Faulty fuel injector
- π Low compression
P0306 Reports by Year
Real Owner Reports
From NHTSA complaint database β actual owner descriptions.
"WE WERE ON THE ROAD (ON A FAMILY VACATION). THE DAY THAT WE WERE COMING BACK THE CHECK ENGINE LIGHT, THE VSC LIGHT AND THE SLIP WARNING LIGHT CAME ON AS WE WERE PULLING OUT OF THE HOTEL PARKING LOT. ON THE WAY TO THE DEALER, I ALSO FELT LIKE THE CAR WAS MISFIRING. THE DEALER FOUND "MULTIPLE CODES P0"
β Toyota Rav4 owner, 01/08/2012
"I experienced a sudden engine failure while driving my 2015 Toyota Highlander on Interstate 294 outside Chicago. I was driving about 75 mph in the far left lane. A warning message "Check AWD" came on the screen, followed by the Engine icon lighting up, then a "TRAC off" message appeared on the scree"
β Toyota Highlander owner, 07/22/2023
"FOR 3 DAYS THE CAR WOULD START WITH ENGINE ROUGHNESS, LASTING 15 SECONDS OR SO (SOMETIMES WITH A CLOUD OF SMOKE FROM THE EXHAUST). ON THE 3RD DAY THE CHECK ENGINE LIGHT, VSC, AND TRAC LIGHTS ILLUMINATED. AN ANALYSIS AT AN INDEPENDENT REPAIR SHOP FOUND A COMPUTER CODE OF P0306 (ENGINE MIS-FIRE ON CYL"
β Toyota 4Runner owner, 01/16/2016
Source: NHTSA Complaints Database
Most Reported Vehicles for P0306
Based on NHTSA owner complaint data.
| # | Vehicle | Reports |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | JEEP WRANGLER | |
| 2 | HONDA PILOT | |
| 3 | CHRYSLER PACIFICA | |
| 4 | HONDA ODYSSEY | |
| 5 | KIA SORENTO | |
| 6 | CHEVROLET TAHOE | |
| 7 | TOYOTA RAV4 | |
| 8 | TOYOTA HIGHLANDER | |
| 9 | TOYOTA 4RUNNER | |
| 10 | TOYOTA AVALON | |
| 11 | HONDA RIDGELINE | |
| 12 | FORD ESCAPE | |
| 13 | FORD EXPLORER | |
| 14 | FORD TAURUS | |
| 15 | CHEVROLET TRAVERSE |
P0306 Reports by Vehicle
Detailed NHTSA complaint analysis for each vehicle model.
Diagnostic Tips
- Scan all modules, save freeze-frame data, and clear unrelated history codes before focusing on P0306.
- Confirm whether companion codes are present first; they often identify the root cause sooner than the headline DTC.
- Prioritize inspection around engine and the most common failure path for this code family.
- Review Mode $06 misfire counters and swap coils/plugs between cylinders to see if the fault follows the component.
- After each repair step, complete one drive cycle and verify readiness monitors instead of judging success after a quick idle test.
- If the code keeps returning on high-incidence platforms (for example JEEP WRANGLER), check TSB patterns and wiring/connector fitment before major part replacement.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- β Skipping freeze-frame review and losing the exact RPM/load conditions when the fault set.
- β Replacing injectors or converters before confirming spark quality and mechanical compression across cylinders.
- β Clearing P0306 and returning the car before monitors complete β this often creates repeat visits.
- β Treating intermittent wiring or connector faults as permanent component failure without wiggle testing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I drive with a cylinder 6 misfire?
What is the most common fix for a cylinder 6 misfire?
How do I do the swap test?
What is the swap test?
How much do spark plugs cost?
What To Do Next
Possible Fixes
- π§ Replace spark plug cylinder 6
- π§ Replace ignition coil cylinder 6
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1
Find your vehicle above
Click your make and model for real owner reports and common causes specific to your vehicle.
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2
Check for recalls
Go to nhtsa.gov/recalls and enter your VIN. Free repairs if covered.
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Get a professional diagnosis
A code alone doesn't identify the exact failed part. A diagnostic ($50β$150) pinpoints the root cause.