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What does code P0305 mean on a Ram and is it safe to drive?

P0305: Cylinder 5 Misfire Detected. Here's what it means on your Ram, what usually causes it, what repairs typically cost, and how safe it is to keep driving.

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What this code means

Misfire on cylinder 5—present on V6, V8, and inline-5 engines only. On V6 engines, cylinder 5 is sometimes harder to access; factor labor into repair estimates.

Common causes for your Ram

  • Fouled spark plug
  • Failed ignition coil
  • Leaking or clogged injector
  • Low compression from valve or ring wear

Symptoms

  • Check Engine Light
  • Engine shaking or rough idle
  • Power loss under acceleration

Typical fixes

  • Replace spark plug and coil on cylinder 5
  • Test and replace injector if needed
  • Compression and leak-down test

Repair cost range

For a Ram, repairs for P0305 often fall between $150 and $1000, depending on the cause and whether you use OEM or aftermarket parts. Labor rates vary by location.

Known issues on Ram

Ram HEMI P0305 is a rear-bank cylinder. On MDS-equipped 5.7L engines, cylinder 5 is a deactivation cylinder—lifter collapse is the primary suspect on high-mileage trucks. An MDS delete kit (AFM disabler) prevents recurrence and is popular in the Ram community.

Most commonly affected models

Ram 1500 5.7L HEMI 2009–2021Ram 2500 6.4L HEMI 2014–2021

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

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

Browse P0305 on your Ram by model year

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

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