P246F: DEF (AdBlue) System: Time Limit For Restricted Operation Mode Exceeded
Critical SeverityNot safe to driveEmissions
P246F means the engine control unit has been operating in a restricted mode because of an unresolved problem in the AdBlue (Diesel Exhaust Fluid) selective catalytic reduction system, and the time or distance limit for that mode has been exceeded. The vehicle is now in countdown to disablement. The underlying cause is almost always an empty AdBlue tank, a failed AdBlue injector or pump, or a faulty NOx sensor that the ECU could not resolve through normal restricted operation. P246F is the most serious code in the SCR cluster: ignoring it leaves you with a vehicle that will not restart.
Estimated repair costFrom €20 to €4000+, varies by vehicle
What does P246F mean?
P246F means the engine control unit has been operating in a restricted mode because of an unresolved problem in the AdBlue (Diesel Exhaust Fluid) selective catalytic reduction system, and the time or distance limit for that mode has been exceeded. The vehicle is now in countdown to disablement. The underlying cause is almost always an empty AdBlue tank, a failed AdBlue injector or pump, or a faulty NOx sensor that the ECU could not resolve through normal restricted operation. P246F is the most serious code in the SCR cluster: ignoring it leaves you with a vehicle that will not restart.
P246F is a emissions-related diagnostic trouble code classified as critical severity. When your vehicle's ECU detects this condition, it stores P246F and illuminates the check engine light.
What are the symptoms of P246F?
If your vehicle has triggered P246F, you may notice one or more of these symptoms:
Check engine light
AdBlue warning light or message on dash, often with a countdown to engine disablement
Reduced engine power (limp mode) on some manufacturers immediately, on others after the counter expires
On Mercedes and VAG: engine will not restart once the counter reaches zero
On BMW: power reduction first, then no-start after counter expires
Smell of ammonia or urea from the exhaust if the AdBlue injector is leaking
AdBlue tank gauge may show empty or full while the actual level is the opposite
What causes P246F?
Here are the most common causes of P246F, ranked by how likely they are to be the culprit:
highAdBlue tank empty or filled with non-AdBlue fluid
highFailed AdBlue injector (clogged with crystallised urea)
highFailed NOx sensor (upstream or downstream of the SCR catalyst)
mediumFailed AdBlue pump or pressure line
mediumAdBlue heater failure (winter only, prevents the system from operating below freezing)
lowAdBlue level sensor reading incorrectly
lowSoftware-disabled SCR system (illegal delete) that the ECU has now caught
Is it safe to drive with P246F?
No - address this immediately. Drivable for a short window only. The countdown to vehicle disable (limp mode followed by engine no-start) has already started. Distances vary by manufacturer: BMW around 1,000 km, Mercedes 50 to 200 km, VAG around 800 km, Ford around 1,000 km. Once the counter reaches zero, the vehicle will not restart until the underlying SCR issue is fixed at a workshop. Do not drive away from a workshop on this code.
How do you diagnose P246F?
Follow these steps to pinpoint the root cause of P246F:
Check the AdBlue tank level visually and against the dashboard reading. If they disagree, the level sensor is faulty. If the tank is empty, refill with manufacturer-approved AdBlue (ISO 22241 specification) and clear the code. Many P246F codes resolve here
Read live data for AdBlue pressure during the AdBlue priming cycle (most scan tools can command this). Healthy systems pressurise to 5 to 9 bar within seconds. Low or zero pressure points to a failed pump or a clogged injector
Read NOx sensor live data values upstream and downstream of the SCR catalyst. The downstream sensor should read significantly lower than the upstream when AdBlue dosing is active. Both reading the same value, or downstream reading higher, indicates either a failed sensor or a non-dosing injector
Inspect the AdBlue injector for crystallised urea deposits. AdBlue crystallises into a white salt-like residue around any leak point or at the injector tip. Heavy crystallisation indicates the injector is failing
On winter-related P246F cases, test the AdBlue heater with a multimeter. Below freezing, the heater must warm the AdBlue fluid before the system can operate. A failed heater triggers P246F only in cold weather and the code clears in spring
Confirm the SCR system has not been software-disabled by checking the NOx reduction rate in live data and looking for tampering indicators (any aftermarket reflash record, missing physical components, or oddly-clean injector that has obviously been wiped)
How much does P246F cost to fix?
Repair costs for P246F vary depending on the root cause and your vehicle. Here are typical estimates:
Repair
Parts Cost
Labor Cost
Total Estimate
DIY Difficulty
Refill AdBlue tank with correct fluid
€20–€50
€0–€30
€20–€80
Easy
Replace AdBlue injector
€150–€500
€100–€250
€250–€750
Moderate
Replace NOx sensor (upstream or downstream)
€200–€700
€80–€200
€280–€900
Moderate
Replace AdBlue pump
€300–€900
€200–€500
€500–€1400
Professional
Replace AdBlue heater
€150–€400
€150–€400
€300–€800
Professional
Refit SCR system after illegal delete (parts, labour, reflash)
€1000–€3000
€400–€1000
€1400–€4000
Professional
Prices estimated as of March 2026. Costs vary by region, vehicle, and shop.
P246F on specific vehicles
P246F behaves differently depending on your vehicle. Select your car below for model-specific causes, known issues, and adjusted cost estimates:
P246F on BMW 3 Series Diesel
BMW 3 Series • 2014-2024
BMW 320d, 330d and 335d with Euro 6 emissions standard (registered from September 2015) use SCR with AdBlue. BMW's countdown to vehicle disablement on P246F is around 1,000 km, displayed as a 'Driving range remaining' value on the dash. Failed AdBlue injectors on the B47 and B57 are the single most common cause of P246F, often from crystallised urea after sub-15-minute trips that do not let the injector self-clean.
What causes P246F on a BMW 3 Series Diesel?
BMW 3 Series DieselAdBlue injector failure on B47/B57 from short-trip duty cycle
BMW 3 Series DieselFailed downstream NOx sensor on F30 and G20 platforms
P246F repair cost for BMW 3 Series Diesel
Estimated costs for BMW 3 Series Diesel ownersadjusted higher than average due to BMW-specific parts pricing
Repair
Parts Cost
Labor Cost
Total Estimate
DIY Difficulty
Refill AdBlue tank with correct fluid
€28–€70
€0–€42
€28–€112
Easy
Replace AdBlue injector
€210–€700
€140–€350
€350–€1050
Moderate
Replace NOx sensor (upstream or downstream)
€280–€980
€112–€280
€392–€1260
Moderate
Replace AdBlue pump
€420–€1260
€280–€700
€700–€1960
Professional
Replace AdBlue heater
€210–€560
€210–€560
€420–€1120
Professional
Refit SCR system after illegal delete (parts, labour, reflash)
€1400–€4200
€560–€1400
€1960–€5600
Professional
Prices estimated as of March 2026. Costs vary by region, vehicle, and shop.
P246F on Volkswagen Passat TDI
Volkswagen Passat • 2015-2024
Passat 2.0 TDI EA288 with Euro 6 standard uses SCR. VAG's countdown is around 800 km after P246F sets. Common causes on the EA288: failed AdBlue pump on early Mk8 (2015-2017) models, failed level sensor, and AdBlue heater failure in cold-climate vehicles imported from northern Germany or Poland after harsh winters.
What causes P246F on a Volkswagen Passat TDI?
Volkswagen Passat TDIFailed AdBlue pump on early Mk8 Passat EA288
Volkswagen Passat TDIAdBlue heater failure after sub-zero winter use
P246F repair cost for Volkswagen Passat TDI
Estimated costs for Volkswagen Passat TDI ownersadjusted higher than average due to Volkswagen-specific parts pricing
Repair
Parts Cost
Labor Cost
Total Estimate
DIY Difficulty
Refill AdBlue tank with correct fluid
€23–€57
€0–€35
€23–€92
Easy
Replace AdBlue injector
€173–€575
€115–€288
€288–€862
Moderate
Replace NOx sensor (upstream or downstream)
€230–€805
€92–€230
€322–€1035
Moderate
Replace AdBlue pump
€345–€1035
€230–€575
€575–€1610
Professional
Replace AdBlue heater
€173–€460
€173–€460
€345–€920
Professional
Refit SCR system after illegal delete (parts, labour, reflash)
€1150–€3450
€460–€1150
€1610–€4600
Professional
Prices estimated as of March 2026. Costs vary by region, vehicle, and shop.
P246F on Mercedes-Benz Sprinter
Mercedes-Benz Sprinter • 2014-2024
Sprinter OM642 and OM651 with Euro 6 emissions use BlueTEC SCR. Mercedes implements the strictest countdown in the EU: sometimes as little as 50 to 200 km after P246F sets, and many model years will not restart at all after the counter expires. AdBlue injector crystallisation is the dominant cause on delivery-fleet Sprinters because of the high stop-start duty cycle. Used Sprinters imported from German fleet operators frequently arrive with P246F latent.
What causes P246F on a Mercedes-Benz Sprinter?
Mercedes-Benz SprinterAdBlue injector crystallisation on high-mileage fleet duty
Mercedes-Benz SprinterFailed NOx sensor on OM651 after 200,000 km
P246F repair cost for Mercedes-Benz Sprinter
Estimated costs for Mercedes-Benz Sprinter ownersadjusted higher than average due to Mercedes-Benz-specific parts pricing
Repair
Parts Cost
Labor Cost
Total Estimate
DIY Difficulty
Refill AdBlue tank with correct fluid
€26–€65
€0–€39
€26–€104
Easy
Replace AdBlue injector
€195–€650
€130–€325
€325–€975
Moderate
Replace NOx sensor (upstream or downstream)
€260–€910
€104–€260
€364–€1170
Moderate
Replace AdBlue pump
€390–€1170
€260–€650
€650–€1820
Professional
Replace AdBlue heater
€195–€520
€195–€520
€390–€1040
Professional
Refit SCR system after illegal delete (parts, labour, reflash)
€1300–€3900
€520–€1300
€1820–€5200
Professional
Prices estimated as of March 2026. Costs vary by region, vehicle, and shop.
P246F on Ford Transit Diesel
Ford Transit • 2016-2024
Ford Transit 2.0 EcoBlue and the older 2.2 TDCi with SCR develop P246F most often from AdBlue level sensor failure. The level sensor sits inside the AdBlue tank and is exposed to urea crystallisation over time. Ford's countdown is around 1,000 km. Aftermarket level sensors are widely available across EU parts suppliers and replacement is a 30 minute job on the Custom and Connect variants.
What causes P246F on a Ford Transit Diesel?
Ford Transit DieselAdBlue level sensor failure on EcoBlue Transit
Ford Transit DieselFailed AdBlue injector on 2.2 TDCi older Transit
Related diagnostic codes
These codes are often seen alongside P246F or indicate related issues:
Yes. P246F is the SCR system's final warning before vehicle disablement. The countdown to limp mode or no-start has already started. On Mercedes vehicles the window is sometimes as short as 50 to 200 km. On BMW and VAG it is usually around 800 to 1,000 km. Drive directly to a workshop and do not drive away on this code.
Will my car really stop running because of an AdBlue code?
Yes, by design. EU type-approval requires diesel vehicles with SCR systems to disable themselves if AdBlue runs out or the system is tampered with. This is not a defect, it is regulatory compliance. Once the counter reaches zero, the engine will not restart until the underlying issue is fixed at a workshop. Some Mercedes models will not even start on the first turn of the key after the counter expires.
Can I just refill the AdBlue tank to fix P246F?
If the tank is empty, yes. Refill with a 10 litre canister of AdBlue (also called DEF, Diesel Exhaust Fluid, or ISO 22241 specification urea) and clear the code with a scan tool. AdBlue is sold at every Polish, Lithuanian, German and Spanish fuel station, typically for 20 to 50 euros per 10 litres. If P246F returns within a few hundred kilometres, the underlying issue is not the tank level but the dosing system itself.
How much does it cost to fix the AdBlue system?
Wide range. Refilling the tank is 20 to 50 euros, often free with the AdBlue you buy. A failed injector is 250 to 750 euros total. A failed NOx sensor is 280 to 900 euros total. A failed pump is 500 to 1,400 euros total. The worst case, refitting an illegally deleted SCR system, runs 1,400 to 4,000 euros and is required for any EU re-registration.
Can I delete the AdBlue system to avoid these problems?
No, and we strongly advise against it. SCR deletes are illegal across the EU, fail technical inspection in every member state, void manufacturer warranty, and create resale-value problems. The fines for circumventing emissions controls range from 1,500 euros (Poland) to over 10,000 euros (Germany) per offence. Vehicles caught with deletes during routine inspection are re-registered as not-roadworthy until the system is refitted at the owner's cost.