Land Rover Defender D250
The 3.0L Ingenium straight-six diesel with 48V mild-hybrid is more refined than the 2.0L diesel. Main issues: oil filter housing recall N908 (fire risk, 2021–2025), EGR coking and DPF on short trips. The 48V DC-DC converter is the designed-in weak link of the MHEV system.
D250: efficient powerhouse
The D250 strikes a good balance: 185 kW is enough for brisk progress on road and gravel, and the mild hybrid boost helps when pulling away under load. Less thirsty than the D300 but barely less capable. The Defender's real all-rounder.
Engine Weaknesses 6
Incorrect plastic specification for the Ingenium I6 oil filter housing. The housing can crack and spray engine oil under pressure onto hot components such as the turbocharger. Fire risk. Recall N908.
Symptoms: Visible oil leak, oil puddles after parking, oil warning light, in severe cases smoke or fire
The DT306 electronic turbocharger actuator develops faults from overheating and deposits. Repair is labour-intensive due to the engine layout.
Symptoms: Power loss, engine warning light, uneven acceleration, delayed turbo response
The DT306 common rail injectors can fail from fuel contamination and internal wear. On the inline-six diesel all 6 injectors are affected.
Symptoms: Rough idle, diesel knock, black smoke, misfires, engine warning light
The DT306 EGR system carbons up particularly with short-trip use. A clogged EGR cooler raises operating temperatures and promotes overheating.
Symptoms: Rough idle, power drop, black smoke under acceleration, engine warning light
The DT306 DPF blocks with predominantly urban driving. Forced regeneration cycles increase fuel consumption and can cause oil dilution.
Symptoms: DPF full warning, reduced engine power, strong fuel smell from exhaust
On the 48V mild hybrid system, the DC-DC converter from 48V to 12V fails. Since MHEV vehicles have no conventional alternator, the 12V battery drains — complete vehicle shutdown is possible.
Symptoms: Charging system fault warning, red battery symbol, dimming lights, infotainment shutdown
Vehicle Weaknesses 8
Missing rubber grommets at body panel penetrations allow rainwater to enter the footwell via the A-pillar. Control units under the driver's seat are damaged. Windscreen sealing is inadequate on early production batches.
Early D250 and D300 diesel models show electrical injector failure as early as around 13,000 km, triggering limp-home mode. Parts on order, vehicle stuck in the workshop for weeks. Affects build years 2020–2022.
Models from 2021–2022 were delivered without ordered optional equipment due to the semiconductor shortage: ClearSight mirror, adaptive cruise control or fully digital instrument cluster were sometimes missing. Order configuration must be checked against vehicle specification.
Optional air suspension on the L663 shows compressor failures and ride height sensor faults. Expensive to repair when it fails. Hissing at the rear-left during height changes is an early warning sign. Regular maintenance is essential.
Pivi Pro system freezes while driving or spontaneously restarts. Early 2020–2021 models particularly affected — black screen, Bluetooth dropouts, loss of Apple CarPlay. Software updates from mid-2021 significantly improve stability.
The heavy spare-wheel door sags over time with frequent use or roof loads. Hinge adjustment at the dealer is required. Not a critical defect but visually and functionally annoying. Earlier production models are more affected.
Early production batches show folded or poorly fitting door seals that generate whistling wind noise at motorway speeds. Largely resolved from model year 2022 onwards. Seal replacement or adjustment fixes the issue.
Front brake pads on early L663 models tend to squeal during light braking. Cause: corrosion film on the disc or unfavourable pad-disc pairing after standing time. Cleaning or pad replacement usually resolves the issue.
Reports & Tests
44 owner complaints filed with NHTSA (2019–2026). Most reported: Lighting (13), Engine (7), Electrical (7).