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Fuel pumps keep your engine fed — whether that's a drop-in electric pump inside the tank, a complete module assembly with integrated sender, or a high-pressure direct injection pump on the cam. Most modern vehicles use an in-tank electric fuel pump rated between 40–90 PSI depending on the system; DI applications run significantly higher, often 1,500–2,900 PSI. Electric pumps typically last 100,000–150,000 miles but can fail earlier from running a low tank frequently, degraded fuel, or a clogged strainer. When replacing, match the flow rate (GPH), operating pressure, and connector type to your application. Module assemblies are the smart buy for most in-tank repairs — they include the pump, sending unit, float, and strainer as a matched set, which eliminates the guesswork of mixing components and recalibrating the fuel gauge. OEM-spec units from brands like Delphi, Denso, Carter, and Bosch carry engineering validation that bare-minimum budget pumps often lack.
Signs you need replacement
- Engine cranks but won't start, or stalls immediately after starting. A pump that can't build pressure to the injectors will leave you with no-start conditions — check fuel rail pressure first before condemning other components; spec varies by vehicle but most port-injected engines need 40–65 PSI at idle.
- Hard start when the engine is hot, but starts fine when cold. Heat causes worn pump motors to draw excessive current or fail intermittently; if the pump driver module is involved, it may also throw a U-code or reduce pump speed incorrectly.
- Fuel gauge reads erratically, stays on empty, or pegs full. The sending unit or float inside the module has failed — common on high-mileage vehicles and a sign the full module assembly should be replaced rather than just the pump.
- Whining, buzzing, or droning noise from the fuel tank under load or acceleration. A healthy fuel pump runs quietly; a high-pitched whine — especially at highway speeds or under load — indicates a worn motor or cavitation from a clogged strainer.
- Engine hesitates or surges under hard acceleration or at highway speed. Intermittent pressure drops caused by a weakening pump typically show up first under high fuel demand — a fuel pressure drop test at WOT will usually confirm it.
- DTC codes P0087, P0088, P0191, or P0230 in the ECU. These point directly to fuel system pressure faults or pump circuit failures and are strong indicators the pump, pump driver module, or associated wiring needs attention.
Frequently asked questions
- How long does a fuel pump last, and is there a scheduled replacement interval? Fuel pumps don't have a fixed replacement interval like a timing belt — they're replaced on failure or symptoms. Most electric in-tank pumps last 100,000–150,000 miles under normal use. Running the tank below a quarter frequently shortens life, since fuel cools and lubricates the pump motor. Inspect at 100k if you're doing major in-tank work anyway.
- Is it worth buying an OEM fuel pump, or is aftermarket just as good? For daily drivers, quality aftermarket brands — Delphi, Carter, Denso, Bosch, Walbro — are engineered to OEM spec and often used as OEM supplier parts anyway. Avoid no-name pumps; incorrect pressure ratings, weak motor windings, and premature strainer failure are common complaints. For turbocharged or modified engines, verify the pump's flow rate (GPH) exceeds your fuel system's demand.
- What else should I replace when I pull the fuel pump module? Always replace the fuel strainer/sock and the tank O-ring or seal — both are inexpensive and inaccessible without dropping the tank again. If the sending unit shows any corrosion or the float arm is bent, replace the full module assembly rather than just the pump. On GDI engines, inspect the cam follower and push rod at the same time; these wear together with the high-pressure pump.















































