P0405 — EGR Sensor “A” Circuit Low

Category: Powertrain → EGR System


What it means (plain English)

The ECM/PCM sees a voltage signal lower than expected from the EGR position sensor (often <0.35V). It thinks the EGR valve is closed or the circuit is shorted to ground. (obd-codes.com)


Symptoms you’ll notice

  • MIL on (repairpal.com)
  • Rough idle, hesitation, or stalling
  • Increased NOx emissions (failed emissions test)
  • Poor fuel economy
  • In diesels: derate mode, poor throttle response

Priority level

Medium–High. Incorrect sensor signals can mislead the ECM, affecting drivability and emissions.


Common causes

  • Failed EGR position sensor (shorted internally) (yourmechanic.com)
  • Short to ground in signal wire
  • Broken wiring / corroded connectors
  • Faulty EGR valve (integrated sensors on many modern designs)
  • Rare: ECM input fault

How pros diagnose it

  1. Scan tool: confirm voltage at EGR position PID (should sweep ~0.5–4.5V).
  2. Back-probe sensor: check reference 5V, ground, and signal return.
  3. Wiggle harness: look for voltage dropouts.
  4. Bench test valve movement: confirm sensor voltage tracks smoothly.
  5. Check wiring continuity/shorts to ground.

Likely fixes

  • Replace EGR position sensor or valve
  • Repair/replace damaged wiring/connectors
  • Clear codes and retest under varying loads

Related / companion codes

  • P0404 (Range/Performance)
  • P0406 (Sensor Circuit High)
  • P0401/P0402 (Flow insufficient/excessive)

Tech notes

Ford/Chrysler products often set P0405 when the feedback circuit drops out due to wiring corrosion at the connector.