What does code P0303 mean on a Mitsubishi and is it safe to drive?

P0303: Cylinder 3 Misfire Detected. Here's what it means on your Mitsubishi, what usually causes it, what repairs typically cost, and how safe it is to keep driving.

PowertrainHigh urgency

What this code means

The PCM has detected a misfire specifically on cylinder 3. Diagnosis follows the same steps as P0301—swap parts to the same position on a known-good cylinder to isolate the fault.

Common causes for your Mitsubishi

  • Worn or fouled spark plug on cylinder 3
  • Failing ignition coil on cylinder 3
  • Leaking or clogged fuel injector
  • Low compression on cylinder 3

Symptoms

  • Check Engine Light, often flashing under load
  • Rough idle or shaking
  • Loss of power, hesitation

Typical fixes

  • Replace spark plug and coil on cylinder 3
  • Test and replace fuel injector
  • Compression test if ignition parts don't resolve it

Repair cost range

For a Mitsubishi, repairs for P0303 often fall between $150 and $900, depending on the cause and whether you use OEM or aftermarket parts. Labor rates vary by location.

Known issues on Mitsubishi

Mitsubishi V6 P0303 on cylinder 3 (rear bank) typically means a failed coil-on-plug. On the 3.8L 6G75 in Eclipse and Endeavor, rear-bank coil access requires intake manifold removal. Confirm the fault with a coil swap to the front bank first.

Most commonly affected models

Outlander 3.0L 6G72 2004–2006Endeavor 3.8L 6G75 2004–2011Eclipse 3.8L 6G75 2006–2012

Is it safe to keep driving your Mitsubishi with this code?

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

Browse P0303 on your Mitsubishi by model year

Year-specific guides include Mitsubishi-tailored causes and repair costs.

More codes for Mitsubishi

View all OBD2 code guides for Mitsubishi