Renault Espace 4
Weaknesses, engine ratings and buying advice
The Espace IV (2002–2014) was Renault's last classic high-roof MPV before the switch to the crossover camp — lots of space, flexible seats, long-distance comfort. It polarises hard: either the car runs forever (330,000–370,000 km are documented) or it becomes a bottomless pit through electronics and engine failures. It shares the infamous electronics of the Laguna II era, so the phase is decisive.
By far the best engine is the M9R (2.0 dCi, from 2006/2007): timing chain rather than belt, durable, driven by high-mileage owners well beyond 300,000 km. As a petrol alternative the F4R (2.0 16V) has no design flaw, just a thirst; the F4Rt (2.0 turbo) is similarly solid. Be wary of the G9T (2.2 dCi, Phase 1): coking EGR, short-lived injectors, oil leaks. Steer clear of the P9X (3.0 V6 dCi): its only thermally press-fitted cylinder liners can sink — a write-off candidate whose repair exceeds the car's value. The V4Y (3.5 V6 petrol) is a thirsty enthusiast piece.
Three themes define the Espace IV. First the UCH electronics complex — multiple fault messages with no real defect, immobiliser, refusal to start, above all on Phase 1. Second the keycard system, whose new parts are barely available any more. Third the electric parking brake with corroding wiring under the rear seat.
Test drive: Have it read out via Renault CLIP before purchase — generic OBD units don't detect the UCH faults. Test the keycard and start procedure several times, watch for coolant loss on the V6 diesel (liners!), check earth connections and the interior for damp, and check the DPF status on the diesel.
Market 2026: Phase 1 with risky diesel $1,700–4,500, Phase 2/3 with 2.0 dCi 130 hp $4,000–7,500, well-kept late cars with 2.0 dCi 173 hp up to $13,000.
Insider pick: A Phase 2/3 from 2007 with the M9R (2.0 dCi), read out clean on CLIP and with timing-chain proof from high mileage. From 2007 the electronics are revised, the M9R the only truly durable engine — and having a second keycard coded straight away hedges against the biggest long-term risk.
241 PS
Espace · Benzin
V6 Spaceship
Decent163–181 PS
3.0L V6 dCi Diesel
8 weaknesses
Stay Away!Generations
Engine Overview
The Renault Espace 4 is available with 7 engine variants — from 80 to 241 hp.
A robust common-rail diesel from the early dCi generation — the Bosch injection system is generally reliable. Known weak points are turbocharger issues, connecting-rod bearing damage and an oil-pump pickup screen that wears with mileage and, if neglected, leads to bearing failure. An oil change every 10,000 km is therefore mandatory. The injectors are sensitive to poor fuel quality. Change the timing belt every 90,000 to 120,000 km; as an interference engine the consequences of a snap are severe.
- !! Turbocharger Failure from 140,000 km
The turbocharger on the F9Q is a known weak spot. Shaft play, oil supply problems and heat damage cause power loss and limp mode, typically from 120,000–160,000 km.
Symptoms: Whistling from turbo, power loss, blue/white smoke clouds, limp mode - !! Injector Failure from 120,000 km
The common-rail injectors on the F9Q are prone to contamination and mechanical wear. Loose injectors or faulty injection leads to misfires and the fault code 'injection defective'.
Symptoms: Engine stumbling, misfires, difficult cold start, 'injection defective' message - !! EGR and Intercooler Soot Deposits from 100,000 km
The EGR valve and intercooler on the F9Q are prone to heavy sooting. A burst intercooler manifests as power loss and heavy smoke — a well-known problem on early Laguna II models.
Symptoms: Heavy smoke, significant power loss, rough engine running
+ 2 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses
2.0-litre diesel developed jointly with Nissan with timing chain and good fundamental long-term robustness — with correct maintenance well over 300,000 km is possible. Weak point is the turbocharger boost pressure control on early examples (2005–2006). Timing chain can start to rattle from 200,000 km; oil quality is critical.
- !! Injector Removal Causes Cylinder Head Damage from 150,000 km
On the M9R the valve cover also serves as the camshaft bearing — both parts are machined together. A damaged valve cover during injector removal will inevitably destroy the cylinder head as well.
Symptoms: Damage occurs during improper repair; no prior warning - !! Coolant Loss / Seal Damage from 180,000 km
Faulty seals or cracks in the M9R engine block can lead to coolant loss. Overheating threatens if the problem is not detected early — especially at higher mileages.
Symptoms: Falling coolant level, overheating warning, white smoke from exhaust - !! Timing chain stretch from 200,000 km
The 2.0 dCi uses a timing chain that stretches at high mileage and wears the sprockets. If the chain jumps, valve damage follows. Replacement usually requires removing the engine and is correspondingly costly.
Symptoms: Rattle on cold start from the front timing chain area that fades once warm
+ 5 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses
2.2 dCi from the early diesel era with a checkered reputation. The EGR valve jams open and force-feeds exhaust gas continuously; turbo boost valve failures cause sudden power loss. Stays together with diligent EGR cleaning and religious oil maintenance, but it is high-effort at used car age.
- !! Injector Needle Valve Destroys Piston from 90,000 km
Faulty injector needles in the G9T spray a fuel jet rather than a mist — at high injection pressure this can cut through the piston or cylinder wall. In the worst case it punctures the engine block.
Symptoms: Jarring engine noise, power loss, knock from the engine - !! Garrett Turbo Failure from 80,000 km
The Garrett turbocharger in the G9T is designed for around 150,000 km service life. Boost sensor corrosion and solenoid valve faults frequently cause limp mode and expensive repairs well before that.
Symptoms: Power loss, limp mode, 'injection fault' message, whistling noises - !! Conrod bearing failure from oil starvation from 100,000 km
With neglected oil changes the connecting-rod bearings wear — a genuine, documented series fault of the 2.2 dCi that ends in engine failure. Frequent oil changes (every 10,000–15,000 km) markedly extend its life.
Symptoms: Knocking, rpm-dependent engine noise, loss of oil pressure, misfiring up to total failure
+ 7 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses
An exotic 3.0-litre V6 diesel with piezo injectors and a timing chain — rare and expensive to maintain with age. The notorious problem is the dropping of the merely press-fitted cylinder liners due to poor cooling or oil-pressure loss, which causes engine failure. Add to that high-pressure pump contamination of the injection system, EGR coking and leaking charge-air hoses. Repair costs are substantial once it goes wrong. Recommended only for experts with good workshop access and a complete history.
- !! Cylinder Liner Drop / Engine Failure from 120,000 km
Identical weakness to the V9X: the cylinder liners of the 3.0 V6 dCi in the Vel Satis drop due to thermal loading. Coolant enters the engine — catastrophic engine failure is the consequence.
Symptoms: Heavy coolant loss, white smoke, engine overheating - !! Oil Rings Worn / Oil Consumption from 110,000 km
The oil control rings settle as with all V9X-based units from around 100,000 km. In the Vel Satis with its high kerb weight this is especially critical as the engine is under greater load.
Symptoms: Increased oil consumption, blue smoke, decreasing engine power - !! Timing Chain Stretch from 150,000 km
The timing chains stretch from 100,000–150,000 km. In the Vel Satis with its heavy body the drivetrain is under sustained high load. Engine removal is mandatory for the replacement and very costly.
Symptoms: Rattling on cold start, engine warning light, chain noise
+ 5 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses
A proven 2.0-litre 16-valve with good long-term stability but a few typical age-related issues. Replace the timing belt and cam phaser together when due; the phaser announces itself beforehand with a diesel-like rattle when warm. The belt-driven water pump is part of the mandatory scope. Crankcase ventilation and valve stem seals cause oil consumption with age, rising beyond 150,000 km. On well-kept examples 250,000 to 300,000 km are easily reached.
- !! Timing belt failure — engine damage from 120,000 km
The 2.0 16V is an interference engine. If the timing belt snaps from an overdue interval, all valves bend and in the worst case piston damage follows. On older cars often an economic write-off.
Symptoms: Sudden engine stall without warning, no longer starts, bent valves - !! Water pump in the timing belt drive from 120,000 km
The belt-driven water pump should be replaced together with the belt. If it fails separately, overheating threatens and in the extreme a belt failure with engine damage. Removing it again doubles the labour cost.
Symptoms: Coolant loss, rising temperature gauge, squealing from the timing belt area, acute overheating on failure - !! Oil Consumption from Coked Piston Rings from 150,000 km
Higher-output F4R engines tend to increased oil consumption at high mileages from coked and stuck piston rings. Regular short full-throttle runs help preventively.
Symptoms: Blue smoke under acceleration and on overrun, dropping oil level
+ 6 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses
A turbocharged version of the 2.0-litre F4R with a twin-scroll charger and 170–205 hp — the same robust cast-iron block, but thermally far more stressed. Port injection rather than direct injection, so no coking worries; torque arrives early and broad with no nervous turbo lag. As an interference engine it demands a timing-belt change including the water pump strictly every 120,000 km — the belt-driven pump in particular triggers most engine failures reported as “belt snap”. The turbo typically fails around 150,000 km, often via the oil feed and banjo seal; the cam phaser announces itself with a cold-start rattle, and ignition coils and lambda sensors are the classic electrical weak spots. The plastic thermostat housing turns brittle. With clean maintenance and short oil intervals 300,000 km are reachable; the block takes tuning to about 300 hp, beyond which the pistons become the limit.
- !! Turbocharger Failure from 150,000 km
The turbocharger on the F4Rt 2.0 Turbo is a well-known wear item. With irregular oil changes and short-trip use, turbo bearing oil ages quickly. Turbo failure at higher mileages is not uncommon.
Symptoms: Whistling from turbo area, blue smoke, power loss, oil in intercooler - !! Overheating Tendency from 100,000 km
The F4Rt 2.0 Turbo in Laguna and Espace tends to overheat in urban use. Thermostat, coolant pump and radiator are typical weak points that should be replaced as preventive maintenance.
Symptoms: Temperature gauge rising, overheating warning, coolant loss - !! Timing belt failure — engine damage from 120,000 km
The 2.0 16V turbo is an interference engine. If the timing belt snaps from an overdue interval, the valves bend — risk of total loss. Change around 120,000 km or five years, water pump always with it.
Symptoms: Sudden engine stall without warning, no longer starts, bent valves
+ 5 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses
A 3.5-litre V6 petrol from the Nissan partnership (VQ35DE base) with 245 hp and a timing chain — powerful and mechanically robust. Typical VQ issues are oil consumption via valve stem seals and piston rings, pre-cat substrate breakdown causing cylinder damage, leaking oil gallery gaskets in the front cover and the heat-sensitive crankshaft sensor. Fuel use is realistically 12–14 l/100 km; rarity and thinning parts supply make upkeep harder.
- !! Timing chain stretch from 120,000 km
The VQ35DE has dual timing chains that can stretch with extended oil change intervals and short-trip driving. Rattling on cold start is an early warning sign.
Symptoms: Rattling on cold start, chain tensioner noise, valve timing fault code - !! Pre-catalyst substrate cracking from 80,000 km
Burnt oil overheats the ceramic pre-catalyst substrate; it crumbles and is partly drawn back into the cylinders — scoring of the cylinder wall and consequential damage. Unlike the QR25DE there was no official recall for this.
Symptoms: Suddenly very high oil consumption, engine noises, potential engine damage - !! Oil gallery gaskets in the front cover leak from 150,000 km
The paper oil gallery gaskets in the timing cover fail and cause an internal oil leak with oil-pressure loss and no external trace. VVT faults and bearing damage can follow. Nissan later supplied metal-reinforced gaskets.
Symptoms: Fault code P0011/P0021 with limp mode, dropping oil level without visible leak, idle fluctuation
+ 7 more engine weaknesses + vehicle weaknesses
Vehicle Weaknesses
| Weakness | Cost | |
|---|---|---|
| Suspension undersized for vehicle weight Ball joints, steering joints and control arms are not adequately dimensioned for the high vehicle weight and wear early. Control arms on the front axle can break in extreme cases. Symptoms: Rattling from the front, excessive steering play, MOT complaints about suspension joints from 80,000 km | Medium | |
| Rear wheel steering electric motors defective The electric motors of the active rear wheel steering (on 4Control models) fail due to defects. Early models were particularly affected before Renault changed the supplier. Symptoms: Rear wheel steering warning light, changed driving behaviour, steering feels different | High | |
| Front control arms and suspension bushings wear early The high vehicle weight of the Espace IV considerably accelerates wear on control arm bushings, tie rod ends and wheel bearings. MOT defects due to excessive play are frequent. Symptoms: Knocking or creaking at the front on corners or during braking, steering wheel vibrations, MOT rejection due to suspension noise. from 100,000 km | Medium |
Alternatives
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Known Problems and Issues +
A total of 65 weaknesses have been documented for the Renault Espace 4 (2002–2014) — 58 engine-related and 7 vehicle-related. One problem engine: P9X (3.0L V6 dCi). Typical issues affect Suspension, Brakes, Body, Electronics.
Espace (F9Q, 2002–2007) — Be Careful: Turbocharger Failure, Injector Failure, EGR and Intercooler Soot Deposits. Power: 116–120 PS.
Espace (G9T, 2002–2007) — Be Careful: Injector Needle Valve Destroys Piston, Garrett Turbo Failure, Conrod bearing failure from oil starvation. Power: 150 PS.
Espace (P9X, 2002–2010) — Stay Away!: Cylinder Liner Drop / Engine Failure, Oil Rings Worn / Oil Consumption, Timing Chain Stretch. Power: 177–181 PS.
Espace (G9T, 2006–2010) — Be Careful: Injector Needle Valve Destroys Piston, Garrett Turbo Failure, Conrod bearing failure from oil starvation. Power: 139 PS.
Espace (M9R, 2006–2014) — Be Careful: Injector Removal Causes Cylinder Head Damage, Coolant Loss / Seal Damage, Timing chain stretch. Power: 150 PS.
Espace (M9R, 2006–2014) — Be Careful: Injector Removal Causes Cylinder Head Damage, Coolant Loss / Seal Damage, Timing chain stretch. Power: 173 PS.
Espace (F4R, 2002–2014) — Be Careful: Timing belt failure — engine damage, Water pump in the timing belt drive, Oil Consumption from Coked Piston Rings. Power: 136–140 PS.
Espace (F4Rt, 2002–2014) — Be Careful: Turbocharger Failure, Overheating Tendency, Timing belt failure — engine damage. Power: 163–170 PS.
Espace (V4Y, 2002–2010) — Be Careful: Timing chain stretch, Pre-catalyst substrate cracking, Oil gallery gaskets in the front cover leak. Power: 241 PS.
What to watch out for with the Renault Espace? See the detailed listing of all engine and vehicle weaknesses in the sections above.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Last updated: February 2026 · All information without guarantee