🔧 FixIt
🟡

P0711 on CHEVROLET CAMARO

Severity
Medium
NHTSA Reports
3
Most Affected
2016, 2017

What P0711 Means on Your CHEVROLET CAMARO

Real CHEVROLET CAMARO Owner Reports (Source: NHTSA Complaints Database)

"The transmission temperature sensor has gone bad in my 2016 Camaro ss with 6.2L engine, GM has recalled thousands of 2016 vehicles with this very issue, these transmissions have enough issues as it is, and GM knows it’s an issue or they wouldn’t have already recalled all those other 2016 vehicles."

— 2016 CHEVROLET CAMARO owner • ELECTRICAL SYSTEM • Filed 04/17/2025

"On Friday August 12th 2022 at 9:30pm check engine light came on after car was sitting turned off for a few hours while my fiance was buffing/polishing/waxing the car. Checked the chevy app, it didn't list any problems. Took it to auto zone. They ran diagnostics. Came back codes P0711 and P0700."

— 2016 CHEVROLET CAMARO owner • POWER TRAIN • Filed 08/12/2022

"2017 camaro purchased car on february 2017; recently my car has been showing the check engine light every time i go over a speedbump or pot hole or anything. the check engine light will go away in a day or two after that."

— 2017 CHEVROLET CAMARO owner • UNKNOWN OR OTHER • Filed 11/23/2020

Data from NHTSA Vehicle Complaints Database. All reports are filed by vehicle owners directly with the U.S. Department of Transportation.

Common Causes of P0711 on CHEVROLET CAMARO

33.3%
33.3%
33.3%

Percentages based on NHTSA complaint component analysis for this vehicle.

Complaint Trend by Year

2016
2
2017
1

What To Do Next

  1. 1
    Check for recalls on YOUR VIN

    Go to nhtsa.gov/recalls and enter your VIN. Free repairs if your vehicle is covered.

  2. 2
    Get a proper diagnosis

    A code alone doesn't tell you the exact failed part. A diagnostic at a shop ($50-$150) pinpoints the root cause before you spend money on parts.

  3. 3
    Compare repair quotes

    Get 2-3 quotes. Dealer vs independent shop prices often differ 30-50% for the same repair.

P0711 on Other Vehicles

Data sourced from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (U.S. Department of Transportation) and the SAE J2012 OBD-II standard. Code definitions follow the SAE J2012 / ISO 15031-6 standard. Owner reports are filed directly with NHTSA by vehicle owners. This information is provided for educational purposes only and should not replace professional automotive diagnosis. Always consult a qualified mechanic for vehicle repair decisions.

Last updated: March 2026