2012 Volkswagen P0011: What It Means & Is It Safe to Drive?

P0011 on the 2012 Volkswagen: Camshaft Position A – Timing Over-Advanced or System Performance (Bank 1). Here's what it means, what usually causes it, what repairs typically cost, and whether it's safe to keep driving.

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What this code means

The intake camshaft on bank 1 is more advanced than the PCM commanded, or the VVT system isn't responding as expected. Often caused by low/dirty oil or a faulty oil control valve.

Common causes on the 2012 Volkswagen

  • Low or dirty engine oil (most common—change oil first)
  • Failed or sludged oil control valve (OCV/VVT solenoid)
  • Stretched or worn timing chain
  • Stuck VVT actuator (cam phaser)

Symptoms

  • Check Engine Light
  • Rough idle or rattling on cold startup
  • Poor fuel economy
  • Reduced power

Typical fixes

  • Oil change with correct viscosity oil (often resolves it)
  • Clean or replace oil control valve
  • Replace timing chain if stretched
  • Replace cam phaser if faulty

Repair cost range

For a 2012 Volkswagen, repairs for P0011 typically fall between $50 and $1200, depending on the root cause and labor rates in your area.

Known issues on Volkswagen

VW's EA888 2.0T TSI engine uses a cam adjustment system that triggers P0011 when the N205/N318 solenoid is dirty or failing. An oil change and solenoid cleaning is the first step before replacement.

Most commonly affected models

Jetta 2009–2019Passat 2009–2019Tiguan 2009–2017

Is it safe to keep driving your 2012 Volkswagen with this code?

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

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