Home/Audi/2012/P0128

2012 Audi P0128: What It Means & Is It Safe to Drive?

P0128 on the 2012 Audi: Coolant Thermostat (Coolant Temp Below Thermostat Regulating Temperature). Here's what it means, what usually causes it, what repairs typically cost, and whether it's safe to keep driving.

PowertrainLow urgency

What this code means

The engine is not reaching normal operating temperature in the expected time. Usually a stuck-open thermostat.

Common causes on the 2012 Audi

  • Thermostat stuck open
  • Coolant temperature sensor fault
  • Low coolant level

Symptoms

  • Check Engine Light
  • Heater may blow cold
  • Poor fuel economy
  • Temperature gauge stays low

Typical fixes

  • Replace thermostat
  • Replace coolant temperature sensor if faulty
  • Refill coolant and check for leaks

Repair cost range

For a 2012 Audi, repairs for P0128 typically fall between $100 and $350, depending on the root cause and labor rates in your area.

Known issues on Audi

Audi 2.0T TFSI shares the EA888 thermostat housing problem with VW; the plastic housing cracks and the thermostat sticks open. Replace the full housing assembly rather than just the thermostat element.

Most commonly affected models

A4 2009–2016A6 2012–2016Q5 2013–2016

Is it safe to keep driving your 2012 Audi with this code?

For driving-safety guidance—how far you can go, when to tow, and what's urgent—see these checklists:

See all codes for your Audi

Looking for a different code, or want the full guide without the year filter?