VW Tiguan
EA211 evo2 with 48V mild hybrid and 96 kW. Belt-driven starter-generator assists on pull-away. Oil-bath timing belt as maintenance point.
Mild Hybrid Everyday Use
130 hp from the 1.5 eTSI are enough for the Tiguan III in city traffic — solid everyday car with mild hybrid boost.
Engine Weaknesses 5
The 2.0 TDI EA288 DXDC develops hairline cracks in the EGR cooler allowing coolant to seep slowly into the exhaust path. Often recognised late; untreated, cylinder head damage threatens.
Symptoms: Low coolant warning, whitish exhaust smoke, sweet coolant smell, engine protection warning
The EA211 evo2 shows increased oil consumption of 0.5–1 l/1,000 km in some examples, often as early as 50,000 km. The cause is worn piston rings or a faulty crankcase ventilation system. VW classifies up to 0.5 l/1,000 km as normal.
Symptoms: Oil level warning illuminates regularly, bluish smoke under load, measurably increased oil consumption between changes
The 48V mild-hybrid system of the eTSI requires a battery replacement after approx. 5 years (approx. €1,800). The belt starter-generator (BSG) is an additional wear item with no long-term track record. High component costs when faulty.
Symptoms: 48V system warning in instrument cluster, jerkier pull-away if BSG fails, starting delay, stop-start system no longer working
Short-trip and city driving prevent complete OPF regeneration. The result is power loss, increased consumption and warning messages in the instrument cluster. Regular motorway driving above 2,000 rpm helps preventively.
Symptoms: Engine warning light or OPF warning in instrument cluster, noticeably sluggish throttle response, increased fuel consumption, occasional power dip
Soot from exhaust gas recirculation deposits on intake valves and the EGR cooler. Typical for direct-injection engines: valves are not washed by fuel. Leads to rough idle and sluggish throttle response with frequent short-trip use.
Symptoms: Rough idle, hesitation on pull-away, sluggish throttle response especially on cold start, possible fault code P0401
Vehicle Weaknesses 7
On the Tiguan III, all driver assistance systems drop out simultaneously after software updates or spontaneously (ACC, lane keep, Travel Assist, Auto-Hold). Workshops report up to 12 control unit updates required; cameras were replaced in some cases.
After mandatory software updates, workshops miscalibrated the IQ.Light Matrix headlights on the Tiguan III — the beam aimed too high (into treetops). The vehicle was barely usable in the dark. Three workshop visits brought no resolution.
Travel Assist and ACC on the Tiguan III show two critical faults: the system brakes to a standstill on the motorway for no reason, or ignores the set speed limit and accelerates to 130 km/h when 80 km/h is set.
The new MIB4 system in the Tiguan III crashes and reboots while driving, or freezes completely. Navigation, Apple CarPlay, and Bluetooth all drop out. VW is working on over-the-air updates; a final fix is still pending.
VW recalled certain Tiguan models (production years 2022–2024) due to a software fault in the camera control unit. At engine start, the reversing camera may fail to display an image, restricting rear visibility.
The Tiguan eHybrid (2024) does not allow scheduled charging via app or wallbox — VW has no explanation for this. If the charging cable remains plugged in after a full charge, the 12V battery drains until the car won't start.
In the MIB4 system of the Tiguan III, drivers cannot log in as the primary user, and the privacy settings menu won't open (loading spinner hangs). Navigation cannot be reset to factory defaults.
Reports & Tests
66 owner complaints filed with NHTSA (2024–2026). Most reported: Other (21), Electrical (18), Engine (17).