More Information
TPMS sensors are battery-powered transmitters mounted inside each wheel that continuously monitor tire pressure and alert the driver when a tire drops 25% or more below the recommended PSI — a federal requirement on all passenger vehicles sold in the U.S. after 2008. Sensors typically last 7–10 years or 100,000 miles before the internal battery dies, though corrosion, physical damage during a tire change, or a dead battery will trigger early replacement. Each sensor is programmed with a unique ID that must be registered to your vehicle's ECU, so fitment goes beyond just the right thread pitch or valve stem diameter — you need the correct frequency (315 MHz or 433 MHz depending on make/model/year) and a compatible protocol. OEM sensors are plug-and-play but cost $50–$100 each; quality aftermarket units from Schrader, VDO, or Sensata run $20–$50 and work reliably when properly programmed. Programmable multi-application sensors are a smart choice for shops servicing a wide range of vehicles.
Signs you need replacement
- TPMS warning light stays on after inflating tires to spec. If tires are properly inflated but the dashboard sensor icon won't go out after driving 10+ minutes, one or more sensors has likely failed or its battery has died.
- TPMS light blinks for 60–90 seconds at startup, then stays solid. A flashing-then-solid warning sequence specifically indicates a system malfunction — often a dead sensor battery or a sensor that's lost communication with the ECU.
- No pressure reading for one wheel in the vehicle's tire pressure display. Many vehicles show individual PSI per corner; a missing or dashed reading for one wheel points directly to a failed sensor on that corner.
- Sensor physically damaged during a tire dismount or road hazard. The valve stem and sensor body are vulnerable during tire changes — a cracked housing, bent stem, or sheared mounting band means the sensor needs to be replaced before remounting.
- Sensor battery age exceeds 7–10 years. Even without an active fault code, proactively replacing sensors on a high-mileage vehicle during a tire replacement job avoids a return visit once the battery finally dies.
Frequently asked questions
- Do TPMS sensors need to be reprogrammed after replacement? Yes — every replacement sensor must be programmed with a new unique ID and then registered (relearned) to the vehicle's ECU. OEM sensors come pre-programmed for a specific vehicle. Aftermarket programmable sensors require a TPMS tool to clone or write the ID before installation. Most vehicles have a relearn procedure that takes 5–20 minutes.
- Are aftermarket TPMS sensors as reliable as OEM? Quality aftermarket sensors from Schrader (EZ-sensor), Continental/VDO, or Sensata are OE-grade and used by major dealerships. Avoid no-name sensors under $10 — they often use cheaper batteries and inconsistent RF transmission. For mixed fleets or shop inventory, multi-application programmable sensors cover thousands of vehicle applications from a single SKU.
- How much does TPMS sensor replacement cost, and what else should be replaced at the same time? Expect $25–$100 per sensor in parts, plus $20–$75 in labor per wheel if shop-installed. Always replace the TPMS service kit — valve core, cap, nut, and grommet seal — at the same time, since the rubber grommet and aluminum components corrode. Kits run $2–$5 each and prevent valve stem leaks after remounting.















































