2009 Volkswagen P0171: What It Means & Is It Safe to Drive?
P0171 on the 2009 Volkswagen: System Too Lean (Bank 1). Here's what it means, what usually causes it, what repairs typically cost, and whether it's safe to keep driving.
What this code means
The engine is getting too much air relative to fuel. The O2 sensor sees excess oxygen in the exhaust and the PCM is adding more fuel than normal to compensate.
Common causes on the 2009 Volkswagen
- Dirty or faulty mass airflow (MAF) sensor
- Vacuum leaks (PCV hose, intake gasket, brake booster)
- Weak fuel pump or clogged fuel filter
- Leaking or stuck open fuel injectors (less common)
Symptoms
- Check Engine Light
- Rough idle, hesitation, lack of power
- Possible spark knock under load
- Poor fuel economy
Typical fixes
- Clean or replace MAF sensor
- Locate and seal vacuum leaks
- Replace fuel filter / test fuel pressure
- Smoke test intake system
Repair cost range
For a 2009 Volkswagen, repairs for P0171 typically fall between $50 and $500, depending on the root cause and labor rates in your area.
Known issues on Volkswagen
VW P0171 on EA888 TSI engines is most commonly caused by the crankcase vent hose from the valve cover to the intake manifold—VW issued a TSB for this hose on Gen 1 and Gen 2 EA888 engines (2009–2014). It cracks at the valve cover fitting and admits unmetered air. On Gen 3 EA888 (2015+), check the SAI (Secondary Air Injection) valve for leakage—a stuck-open SAI valve causes a lean condition particularly at cold startup. Boost leaks from intercooler couplers are also a P0171 trigger on turbocharged variants; use a pressure test kit on the charge side.
Most commonly affected models