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P2002

OBD-II Diagnostic Code

Severity: Critical

What it means

P2002 means the Diesel Particulate Filter (DPF) is not capturing soot efficiently.
The filter may be clogged, damaged, or the pressure sensors may be faulty.
A highway drive at sustained speed can trigger a regeneration to clean the filter.

Affected Models

  • All diesel OBD-II vehicles with DPF (2007+)
  • Common on VW/Audi TDI, BMW diesel, RAM diesel

Common Causes

  • DPF clogged with soot from short trips
  • Failed regeneration cycles
  • DPF pressure sensor faulty
  • DPF substrate cracked or melted
  • Exhaust leak before the DPF

How to Fix It

  1. Take the vehicle for a 20-30 minute highway drive at 2000+ RPM.

    Sustained highway driving triggers passive DPF regeneration, burning off accumulated soot.
    This is the easiest fix if the filter is not severely clogged.

  2. Use a scan tool to initiate a forced regeneration.

    A mechanic can force an active regeneration cycle using a diagnostic scanner.
    This raises exhaust temperature to burn off soot.

  3. Check the DPF pressure differential sensor.

    Sensors before and after the DPF measure pressure difference.
    A faulty sensor may report low efficiency when the DPF is actually fine.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is DPF regeneration?

Regeneration burns accumulated soot inside the DPF at high temperature (600°C+).
It happens automatically during highway driving or can be forced with a scan tool.

Do short trips cause DPF problems?

Yes.
The DPF needs sustained high exhaust temperatures to regenerate.
Short city trips never reach these temperatures, causing soot buildup.