2015 Mitsubishi P0325: What It Means & Is It Safe to Drive?

P0325 on the 2015 Mitsubishi: Knock Sensor 1 Circuit Malfunction (Bank 1). Here's what it means, what usually causes it, what repairs typically cost, and whether it's safe to keep driving.

PowertrainMedium urgency

What this code means

The PCM isn't receiving a valid signal from knock sensor 1. Without knock feedback, the PCM retards ignition timing as a safety measure, reducing power and economy.

Common causes on the 2015 Mitsubishi

  • Failed knock sensor
  • Corroded or broken wiring/connector at the sensor
  • Actual engine knock from carbon buildup or low-octane fuel

Symptoms

  • Check Engine Light
  • Reduced power and fuel economy (PCM retards timing)
  • Possible audible knock or ping under load

Typical fixes

  • Replace knock sensor
  • Repair wiring and connector
  • Use correct octane fuel and address carbon buildup

Repair cost range

For a 2015 Mitsubishi, repairs for P0325 typically fall between $150 and $500, depending on the root cause and labor rates in your area.

Known issues on Mitsubishi

Mitsubishi P0325 on 2.4L 4B12 MIVEC (Outlander, ASX, Lancer)—the knock sensor is mounted mid-block and accessible. The sensor itself is generally reliable; P0325 usually means wiring harness heat damage from the exhaust routing nearby. On Eclipse GT 3.8L 6G75 V6, the knock sensors (one per bank) are under the intake plenum; intake removal is required. On Lancer Evo X 4B11T turbocharged, a non-functional knock sensor is a critical safety issue—the Evo ECU makes aggressive timing decisions based on knock sensor feedback; replace immediately.

Most commonly affected models

Outlander 2.4L 4B12 MIVEC 2007–2021Eclipse GT 3.8L 6G75 V6 2006–2012Galant 2.4L 4G64 2004–2012

Is it safe to keep driving your 2015 Mitsubishi 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 Mitsubishi

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