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Citroën · Mid-Size · 2022–2026 Custom Search

Citroën C5 X 1

Weaknesses, engine ratings and buying advice

1.0 / 5.0 · Based on 4 engine variants · How we rate

The Citroën C5 X (from 2022) is Citroën's re-entry into the executive class — after five years without a flagship. Not a conventional C5 successor but a crossover between saloon, estate, and SUV. Built in China, sold in Europe. The hydropneumatic suspension is history — instead there are Progressive Hydraulic Cushions (PHC), hydraulically damped bump stops in the struts.

Engine choice: The EB2-DTS (1.2L PureTech 130, 96 kW) is the base petrol — and yes, this is a 1,598 kg car with a 1.2-litre three-cylinder. With the EAT8 automatic gearbox (8-speed torque converter, standard) it works surprisingly well — but the wet belt is the known risk. Change interval 100,000 km, recommended 80,000 km / 5 years. Preventive replacement 700–800 €, engine damage 5,000–8,000 €. The EP6-THP (1.6L Turbo, 133 kW) in the PureTech 180 brings significantly more power and composure — but has the classic EP6 issues: timing chain stretch, oil consumption, thermostat.

The DV5 (1.5 BlueHDi, 96 kW) as diesel is only available in select markets — economical, solid, but arguably too weak for the C5 X. The PHEV version (1.6 THP + electric motor, 165 kW system output) is the technical flagship: 50+ km electric range, EU plug-in hybrid classification. However: a recall concerning the PHEV battery (fire risk) affects certain production batches — must be verified.

The EAT8 gearbox occasionally shows shift hesitation — especially when pulling away from standstill and when manoeuvring. Software updates help, but the issue is not fully resolved. The suspension (PHC) is comfortable, but some drivers report excessive body roll in corners and slow response over transverse ridges.

Infotainment problems are the persistent issue on the C5 X: screen freezes, navigation calculates slowly, Android Auto/Apple CarPlay loses connection. Software updates improve the situation, but the hardware (Qualcomm chipset) is underpowered. The ADAS systems (lane-keeping assist, adaptive cruise control) trigger false alarms — especially at roadworks and with faded lane markings.

Tail light seals can leak on early production batches — moisture in the tail light housing. No safety hazard, but a quality issue.

Test drive: Test infotainment extensively: navigation, smartphone pairing, voice control. ADAS on the motorway: false alarms? Suspension: over transverse ridges and bumps — comfortable but not wallowy? EAT8: pull-away, manoeuvring, kickdown — shift hesitation? PureTech: check oil level (wet-belt check). PHEV: recall status, charge level, test E-mode.

2026 market: PureTech 130 from 25,000–30,000 €. PureTech 180 from 28,000–35,000 €. PHEV from 30,000–38,000 €. The C5 X is the most comfortable car in the Citroën range — and as a used car significantly cheaper than comparable German executive models.

Insider pick: EB2-DTS PureTech 130 EAT8, from model year 2023 (software updates applied) — the simplest drivetrain. Wet-belt replacement documentation is mandatory. PHEV only with verified recall status.

Most Fun Engine

181 PS

C5 X · Benzin

Powerful C5 X petrol

Fun to Drive!
Problem Engine

140–211 PS

1.6L THP Benzin

7 weaknesses

Stay Away!

Engine Overview

The Citroën C5 X 1 is available with 4 engine variants — from 100 to 211 hp.

1.2L PureTech 130 · Petrol· 130–135 PS
2022 2026

PureTech 130 Turbo (96 kW) — same engine as the EB2-DT with more boost pressure. Shares the wet-belt issue of production years before 2019 entirely. Crankshaft end-float from worn thrust washers is the second major weak point — once exceeding 0.5 mm, engine failure is imminent. Oil consumption from piston ring coking should be monitored from 60,000 km onwards. From 2022, significantly more reliable with a timing chain.

  • !! Wet belt deterioration in oil bath from 65,000 km

    Oil-bath timing belt delaminates due to fuel dilution of the oil; stop-start operation of the mild hybrid system adds additional belt stress. Newer Gen 3 engines from 2022 feature a revised design.

    Symptoms: Oil pressure warning light, engine noises, power drop, potential engine damage
    900–1,600 $
  • !! Elevated oil consumption — piston rings from 75,000 km

    Oil scraper rings coke up from short-trip use with direct injection; engine can consume up to 3 l/1,000 km. Stellantis offers extended goodwill up to 175,000 km for build years before 2022.

    Symptoms: Elevated oil consumption, blue smoke on throttle, frequent oil checks needed
    1,500–3,500 $
  • !! Turbo bearing damage from diluted oil from 85,000 km

    Higher boost levels increase thermal stress; fuel-diluted engine oil reduces lubricity and damages the turbo journal bearings. Warning signs are often not detectable in advance.

    Symptoms: Whistling or rattling turbo noise, bluish exhaust smoke, power drop
    1,000–2,500 $

+ 3 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses

1.2L PureTech Turbo 48V · Petrol Mild-Hybrid· 130–135 PS
2024 2026

48V mild hybrid variant of the PureTech three-cylinder with an electric starter-generator (21 kW) that assists at pull-away and enables coasting. Revised dry belt from 2023 — no wet-belt issues. e-DCS6 dual-clutch gearbox as standard, still too young for reliable long-term data on clutch actuator wear. Oil changes must be strictly observed, valve clearance checked every 80,000 km.

  • !! Wet belt deterioration in oil bath from 70,000 km

    Oil-bath timing belt delaminates due to fuel dilution of the oil; stop-start operation of the mild hybrid system adds additional belt stress. Newer Gen 3 engines from 2022 feature a revised design.

    Symptoms: Oil pressure warning light, engine noises, power drop, potential engine damage
    900–1,600 $
  • !! Oil-bathed timing belt — same as all EB2 turbo engines from 80,000 km

    Despite the mild hybrid addition, the base EB2-DT engine retains the problematic oil-bathed timing belt unchanged. The belt risk is identical to that of other EB2-DT variants.

    Symptoms: No audible warning, oil pressure warning, belt debris visible in oil system, sudden engine shutdown on belt failure
    400–1,200 $
  • !! Belt-starter-generator BSG faults from 80,000 km

    The 48V belt-starter-generator can fail from software faults or bearing problems. When defective the system deactivates the recuperation boost mode; the engine continues to run conventionally.

    Symptoms: Loss of boost function, warning display in dashboard, increased fuel consumption
    600–1,800 $

+ 3 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses

1.6L THP · Petrol· 179 PS
2022 2026

The EP6DT/EP6CDT (Prince THP) is the most problematic engine from the PSA-BMW cooperation. Timing chain wear, high oil consumption, and VVT solenoid failures occurred on a large scale; camshaft sprocket slipping was only resolved from 2012 with harder gears. Short oil change intervals (max. 10,000 km) and quality 5W-30 engine oils are mandatory.

  • !! Timing chain stretch and camshaft sprocket slippage from 80,000 km

    The THP engine suffered severely from timing chain stretch caused by the weak single-row tensioner, combined with camshaft sprockets slipping on the shaft. This leads to uncontrolled valve timing loss and can cause piston-to-valve contact. PSA improved the sprockets from model year 2012 onwards.

    Symptoms: Rattle on start-up, power loss, rough idle, check engine light P0011/P0012, in the worst case engine damage without warning
    800–2,500 $
  • !! Extreme oil consumption from piston ring and valve stem seal wear from 80,000 km

    THP engines frequently consume 1–3 litres of oil per 1,000 km from around 80,000 km, in extreme cases up to 4 l/1,000 km. Causes are worn exhaust valve stem seals and piston rings worn from soot deposits.

    Symptoms: Very frequent oil top-ups, blue or white smoke from exhaust, black deposits on spark plugs, oil smell in engine bay
    1,000–3,000 $
  • !! Turbocharger failure due to oil supply problems from 100,000 km

    The THP turbocharger suffers from insufficient oil supply, especially when the oil level drops too low or the oil degrades from excessively long change intervals. Oil coke from the crankcase also blocks the oil feed line to the turbo.

    Symptoms: Whistling or rattling turbo noise, blue smoke under full load, power drop, measurable boost pressure loss
    800–2,200 $

+ 4 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses

1.6L THP + E-Motor · Petrol Plug-in-Hybrid· 225 PS
2022 2026

Plug-in hybrid powertrain with a 1.6-litre turbo petrol engine (132 kW) and electric motor (81 kW), system output 225 hp. 12.4 kWh battery providing approximately 50-60 km of pure electric range, EAT8 automatic as standard. The combustion engine is based on the EP6 family with the well-known timing chain issue. The interplay between combustion and electric motor is complex — software updates are frequently needed. Factor in the high-voltage battery and power electronics as additional failure sources.

  • !! Timing chain stretch — EP6 tensioner failure from 80,000 km

    The Prince engine family (EP6) is well known for faulty hydraulic chain tensioners. The timing chain stretches prematurely and skips teeth. The result is valve-to-piston contact and frequently total engine destruction.

    Symptoms: Rattling noise on cold start, rough idle, sudden power loss, check engine light
    800–2,000 $
  • !! High oil consumption from faulty oil scraper rings from 80,000 km

    The too-narrow oil scraper rings on the EP6 lead to high oil consumption — sometimes 1–4 litres per 1,000 km. Poor oil quality from extended intervals accelerates ring sticking. A known design problem in early production.

    Symptoms: Blue smoke, oil warning light, frequent top-ups needed, consumption already below 100,000 km
    1,500–4,000 $
  • !! Recall: High-voltage battery overheating fire risk

    Faulty battery management software can cause the traction battery to overheat and create a fire risk. Stellantis recalled over 90,000 PHEV vehicles (JQD/JQE). Affects model years 2020–2022.

    Symptoms: No driver-visible signs — fire risk occurs during charging without visible warning
    0–0 $

+ 3 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses

Vehicle Weaknesses

WeaknessCost
!Infotainment system with software bugs and failures

Owners of early C5 X build years report immature electronics: the infotainment system freezes or reboots, and the radio has cold dropouts in the first few minutes of driving. Citroën has not delivered immediate software solutions for all problems.

Symptoms: Radio dropouts after cold start (approx. 10 min), screen freezes, navigation sporadically non-functional, control unit awaiting update
from 10,000 km
Low
!ADAS: false alerts and dangerous steering

The C5 X ADAS (lane keeping, collision warning) triggers false alerts almost daily. Lane keeping steers dangerously in construction zones.

Symptoms: Collision warning triggers without cause, lane assist steers wrong, head-up display flickers
from 10,000 km
Low

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Known Problems and Issues +

A total of 31 weaknesses have been documented for the Citroën C5 X 1 (2022–2026) — 25 engine-related and 6 vehicle-related. 4 problem engines: EP6-THP (1.6L THP), EB2-DTS (1.2L PureTech 130), EP6-PHEV (1.6L THP + E-Motor), EB2-DT-MH (1.2L PureTech Turbo 48V). Typical issues affect Electronics, Suspension, Gearbox, Other.

C5 X (EP6-THP, 2022–2026) — Stay Away!: Timing chain stretch and camshaft sprocket slippage, Extreme oil consumption from piston ring and valve stem seal wear, Turbocharger failure due to oil supply problems. Power: 179 PS.

C5 X (EB2-DTS, 2022–2026) — Stay Away!: Wet belt deterioration in oil bath, Elevated oil consumption — piston rings, Turbo bearing damage from diluted oil. Power: 130–135 PS.

C5 X (EB2-DT-MH, 2024–2026) — Stay Away!: Wet belt deterioration in oil bath, Oil-bathed timing belt — same as all EB2 turbo engines, Belt-starter-generator BSG faults. Power: 130–135 PS.

C5 X (EP6-PHEV, 2022–2026) — Stay Away!: Timing chain stretch — EP6 tensioner failure, High oil consumption from faulty oil scraper rings, Recall: High-voltage battery overheating fire risk. Power: 179 PS.

What to watch out for with the Citroën C5 X? See the detailed listing of all engine and vehicle weaknesses in the sections above.

Frequently Asked Questions

What problems and weaknesses does the Citroën C5 X 1 have? +
The Citroën C5 X 1 has 25 known engine weaknesses and 6 vehicle weaknesses.
What should I look for when buying a used Citroën C5 X 1? +
faq.watch_a_avoid
Which engine is recommended? +
None of the available engines are rated 'Good Choice'. Stay away! The most fun to drive is the EP6-THP (1.6L THP). Problem engine: EP6-THP (1.6L THP) — stay away!
Which Citroën C5 X 1 engine is the most fun? +
The {code} ({displacement}) offers the most driving fun in the Citroën C5 X 1 — rated: "Fun to Drive!". {description} 181 hp in the modern C5 X — a punchy turbopetrol for the comfortable touring saloon. A harmonious and confident combination with the 8-speed automatic.
Is the Citroën C5 X 1 worth buying used? +
Caution is advised with the Citroën C5 X 1 — 4 of 4 engine variants are rated 'Stay Away!'. The engine choice is crucial.
What horsepower variants are available for the Citroën C5 X 1? +
The Citroën C5 X 1 is available with engine variants from 100 to 211 hp. Petrol: EP6-THP (1.6L THP), EB2-DTS (1.2L PureTech 130), EP6-PHEV (1.6L THP + E-Motor), EB2-DT-MH (1.2L PureTech Turbo 48V).

Last updated: February 2026 · All information without guarantee