The B8.5 A4 with the 2.0T EA888 Gen 2 engine is generally solid but notorious for oil consumption issues and specific cooling/transmission concerns. Most problems are manageable if caught early, but the piston ring defect can be catastrophic if ignored.
Excessive Oil Consumption (Piston Ring Failure)
Common · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: burning 1+ quart per 1,000 miles, blue smoke on startup or acceleration, low oil pressure warning, carbon buildup on intake valves
Fix: EA888 Gen 2 engines suffer from defective piston rings that allow oil to burn. Fix requires removing engine, complete teardown, and replacing all pistons with updated rings. 20-25 labor hours for full engine-out rebuild or 18-22 hours for short block replacement if cylinder walls are scored.
Estimated cost: $4,500-7,500
Transmission Oil Cooler Failure (ZF 8-Speed)
Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: limp mode activation, transmission slipping or harsh shifts, coolant mixing with ATF (milky fluid), transmission overheating warnings
Fix: Internal cooler leaks allow coolant and transmission fluid to mix, destroying the transmission if not caught immediately. Requires cooler replacement (2-3 hours) but often needs full transmission rebuild or replacement if contamination occurred (12-16 hours).
Estimated cost: $800-1,200 for cooler only, $4,000-6,500 if transmission damaged
Timing Chain Tensioner and Guide Wear
Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 100,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: rattling noise on cold start (first 3-5 seconds), check engine light with cam correlation codes, rough idle, metallic chain noise at idle
Fix: Tensioner fails or guides wear, allowing chain slap. Requires front engine disassembly with new tensioner, guides, and often the chain itself. 8-12 labor hours. Failure can result in valve-to-piston contact.
Estimated cost: $2,000-3,500
Water Pump and Thermostat Housing Leaks
Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-110,000 mi
Symptoms: coolant leaks visible below engine, overheating, low coolant warning light, sweet smell from engine bay
Fix: Plastic impeller water pumps fail and thermostat housings crack. Replace both as a set with upgraded metal impeller pump. 3-4 labor hours.
Estimated cost: $800-1,400
Carbon Buildup on Intake Valves
Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 60,000-90,000 mi
Symptoms: rough idle and misfires, hesitation on acceleration, reduced fuel economy, check engine light with misfire codes
Fix: Direct injection engines have no fuel washing valves clean. Requires walnut blasting intake ports with manifold removed. 4-5 labor hours. Should be done preventively every 60k-80k miles.
Estimated cost: $500-900
Transmission Mount Failure
Occasional · low severity
Typical onset: 80,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: clunking when shifting from park to drive, excessive vibration at idle, lurching during acceleration, visible sagging of transmission
Fix: Hydraulic transmission mount deteriorates. Replacement requires supporting transmission and unbolting mount. 1.5-2 labor hours.
Estimated cost: $400-700
Fuel Filter Clogging (Diesel Only, If Applicable)
Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 40,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: hard starting, loss of power under load, engine stalling, rough running
Fix: If diesel variant, fuel filter requires replacement more frequently than specified. Located under vehicle near fuel tank. 1-1.5 labor hours.
Estimated cost: $250-450
Owner tips
Check oil level every 500-1,000 miles religiously — these engines WILL consume oil even when healthy
Perform walnut blasting every 60k-80k miles as preventive maintenance to avoid misfires
Use only VW 502.00/504.00 approved synthetic oil and quality filters
Inspect transmission fluid condition at 40k miles — if milky or smells burnt, check cooler immediately
Avoid extended oil change intervals — stick to 5,000 miles max despite Audi's longer recommendations
Buy only if oil consumption history is documented as minimal and you have $2k-3k cushion for potential piston ring work — otherwise the 2.0T time bomb makes it a risky purchase over 70k miles.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
Fitment notes: Located under rear cargo floor on right side; AGM required for start-stop system
As an Amazon Associate, OLP earns from qualifying purchases — how we link. This never changes the specs we publish.
Every control module on the 2009-2016 Audi A4 — where it lives, replacement time, and what it takes to program a replacement. Modules marked dealer / factory tool won't work after a part swap alone — budget for programming.
Transmission Control Module (TCM)3.5 hr R&Rsecurity gateway +1.2 hr
📍 Inside transmission valve body (DSG/S-tronic) or external on case (conventional auto)
📍 Under driver or passenger seat, mounted to seat frame
🔧 VCDS
⚠️ Optional equipment; heated/ventilated seat control integrated
Aftermarket tool coverage varies by software version and vehicle build — treat "aftermarket tool" rows as "usually possible" and verify against your tool maker's coverage list before promising a customer. Spot a wrong location or hour? Tell us — corrections ship fast here.
Size-standard part numbers — verify your connector type before buying. Rear blades are model-specific; check the package's vehicle list.
Fuel economy figures are EPA data via fueleconomy.gov (median across matching trims). Performance figures are compiled estimates for the 2013 Audi A4 2.0L Turbo I4 and can vary by trim.
🔧 Database maintained under the daily editorial review of Chris Hackleman · Master Technician · 20+ years and Jeff Moore · Master Lexus & Toyota Mechanic · 20+ years.