2005 Mercedes-Benz P0300: What It Means & Is It Safe to Drive?

P0300 on the 2005 Mercedes-Benz: Random/Multiple Cylinder Misfire Detected. Here's what it means, what usually causes it, what repairs typically cost, and whether it's safe to keep driving.

PowertrainHigh urgency

What this code means

The PCM has detected misfires across multiple cylinders. This can cause damage to the catalytic converter if driven for long.

Common causes on the 2005 Mercedes-Benz

  • Worn spark plugs or ignition coils
  • Clogged or bad fuel injectors
  • Low compression
  • Vacuum leak, bad MAF, or fuel delivery issue

Symptoms

  • Check Engine Light (often flashing under load)
  • Rough idle, shaking, loss of power
  • Possible smell of unburned fuel

Typical fixes

  • Replace spark plugs and coils as needed
  • Clean or replace fuel injectors
  • Fix vacuum/fuel issues
  • Compression test if no obvious cause

Repair cost range

For a 2005 Mercedes-Benz, repairs for P0300 typically fall between $150 and $1200, depending on the root cause and labor rates in your area.

Known issues on Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes P0300 on M272 3.5L V6 engines is often caused by the balance shaft gear tooth fracture—a known issue where the plastic-toothed idler gear in the timing system cracks and causes cam timing walk, resulting in P0300 and a rattling noise on startup. This requires immediate attention as timing failure can cause engine damage. On M276 V6 and M278 V8 engines, individual coil-on-plug boots crack with age. On CDI diesel engines, P0300 indicates glow plug failure or a fuel injector return leak—a completely different failure path.

Most commonly affected models

GLK350 M272 3.5L V6 2010–2015C350 M276 3.5L V6 2012–2015E350 M276 2010–2016

Is it safe to keep driving your 2005 Mercedes-Benz 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 Mercedes-Benz

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