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.
Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.