Real fuel injector replacement costs in 2026, broken down by vehicle type, port vs GDI, dealer vs independent, and where you can save without cutting qu…
When someone calls our shop and asks "how much does it cost to replace a fuel injector," the honest answer is "it depends," and that's a frustrating answer when you're trying to budget for a repair. So this is the long version of "it depends" — the actual ranges in 2026, broken down by what you're driving, where you take it, and what kind of injector you're buying.
The numbers below come from a mix of dealer flat-rate quotes, independent shop estimates, and the prices we see on our own catalog. They're not made up. They're what people are actually paying right now, and where in the process you're most likely to either save real money or get charged for things you don't need.
For a single port fuel injector replacement on a common four-cylinder, expect $250 to $600 all in at an independent shop. For a single GDI injector on the same kind of vehicle, expect $400 to $900. For a full set of four to six replacements, multiply parts by quantity and add roughly two to four hours of labor on top.
Dealer pricing typically lands 30% to 60% higher than the independent-shop figures, sometimes more on luxury makes. That gap is mostly parts markup and the dealer labor rate. We'll go through where the money actually goes below.
"Dealer pricing typically lands 30% to 60% higher than independent shops. That gap is mostly parts markup and the dealer labor rate."
The bill on a fuel injector job has three real components: the injector itself, the labor to install it, and the supporting parts that should be replaced at the same time. Each of those varies by a factor of two or more depending on choices you make.
The injector cost is the most visible piece, and it's also where the spread is widest. New OEM parts from the dealer are the high end. Remanufactured injectors from a reputable rebuilder are usually 40% to 60% less. Generic aftermarket injectors are cheaper still but are a coin flip on quality, and the labor cost of doing the job twice — once with a bad part, once with a good one — eats whatever savings the cheap injector promised.
Labor cost depends on three things: where the injectors are physically located on the engine, what other parts have to come off to reach them, and the shop's hourly rate. A four-cylinder port-injection setup with the rail on top of the engine is the cheap end. A V6 or V8 with the rear bank tucked under the firewall is the expensive end. GDI engines almost always require more labor than port engines because of the higher fuel pressures involved, the precision torque requirements on the injector hold-down, and the specialized tooling sometimes needed to seat the injector against the head.
Supporting parts add up faster than people expect. Fresh O-rings and pintle caps are basic — most quality injectors come with them. But a job that's been delayed often also needs a fuel filter (especially common on older Japanese imports), updated injector clips that have gone brittle from heat, and on GDI engines an inspection of the high-pressure fuel pump for cavitation damage that frequently rides along with injector failure. If you're not sure whether you're chasing an injector problem in the first place, our fuel injector symptoms walkthrough covers what to verify before you authorize the work.
These are full-job ranges including parts, labor, and standard supporting hardware. The lower end assumes a reputable independent shop and a quality remanufactured or OEM-equivalent injector. The higher end assumes dealer parts and dealer labor.
Older Camry, Accord, Altima through ~2014
Newer Camry, Accord, Sonata from 2015+
Older Silverado, F-150, Ram 1500
One of the most expensive jobs in the consumer market
Indie shop low end; dealer high end
Reman saves 40-60% vs dealer
Boat-in-water labor surcharge applies
1-3 hr labor incl. tank removal
"Modern truck GDI is one of the most expensive jobs in the consumer market — a full set of six EcoBoost injectors at the dealer can crack $3,800."
Dealer pricing is higher for reasons that are partly justified and partly not. The justified part is that dealer technicians are factory-trained on specific platforms, have access to the manufacturer's service data, and use OEM parts every time. For unusual problems on complex modern engines — particularly under-warranty work — that's worth real money.
The unjustified part, in many cases, is the markup on routine work. Replacing a port injector on a 2010 V8 doesn't require platform-specific factory training. The dealer's parts markup on a $90 OEM injector that the parts counter sells over the counter for $135 doesn't reflect technical complexity. It reflects business model.
If your vehicle is out of warranty and you're paying out of pocket, the case for dealer service on routine fuel system work is weak. Most independent shops can do the same job for 30% to 50% less, and a quality independent shop with diagnostic equipment will catch the same things the dealer would. If you're seeing diagnostic codes you can't decode yourself, our fuel injector problems Q&A is a good first stop before you book the appointment.
There are three places to save real money on a fuel injector job, and one place where saving will cost you more in the long run.
The first place to save is on the part. A reputable remanufactured injector with documented test data, OEM-supplier internal components, and a transferable warranty performs identically to a new OEM part for a fraction of the cost. The catch is the word "reputable." A generic aftermarket injector with no test data and a 90-day warranty is not the same product. Verify that the reman service flow-tests at multiple pulse widths, replaces seals with original-supplier parts, and provides per-injector test results.
The second place to save is on labor by choosing the right shop. Independent shops with diagnostic-grade scan tools, fuel pressure gauges, and ideally a flow bench will cost less per hour than a dealer and often have more experience with older vehicles than a dealer's youngest technicians do.
The third place to save is on parts you already have. If you're sending injectors out to a remanufacturing service like ours, the labor at the install shop drops because there's no diagnostic-and-decision step — the shop just removes, ships, receives, reinstalls. Round-trip on a port-injection set with us runs one to three days, and many shops are fine waiting if you've already lined up the timing.
"The place where saving will cost you is on diagnosis. Replacing injectors based on a guess is the most expensive thing you can do in this category."
The place where saving will cost you is on diagnosis. Replacing injectors based on a guess, without confirming the failure mode with proper testing, is the most expensive thing you can do in this category. We see vehicles every month that came in for "replace all the injectors" and turned out to need a single coil pack, a fuel pressure regulator, or an oxygen sensor. A proper diagnosis costs $80 to $200 and prevents the $1,500 mistake.
Port reman
$49.99
per injector · lifetime warranty
GDI reman
$69.99
per injector · lifetime warranty
OEM-equivalent catalog
$39.99–$199.99
3,900+ SKUs · same-day ship
For context, our remanufactured port fuel injectors run $49.99 each, GDI runs $69.99 each, and our OEM-equivalent injector catalog prices new injectors at $39.99 to $199.99 depending on the vehicle and configuration. All of those prices include the lifetime warranty and same-day shipping when ordered before 2 PM Pacific. Shipping is free on orders of four or more injectors.
If you're sending us your existing injectors for remanufacturing, the free quote tool gives you a confirmed price in under a minute, with no payment required until your injectors arrive and have been diagnosed. About 5% of the injectors that get mailed in turn out to be unrepairable; in those cases, we either refund the diagnostic cost or apply it toward a replacement. If you're not certain which injector your vehicle uses, the VIN decoder resolves it in a second.
The math is what it is. Once you have the diagnosis confirmed, the choice between those two extremes is a decision about where you want your money to go.