2008 Toyota Prius – Intermittent limp mode, loud engine with poor acceleration, no fault codes

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by Zanga, Jan 24, 2026 at 5:45 AM.

  1. Zanga

    Zanga New Member

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    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
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    Hi everyone, hoping someone here can point me in the right direction because I’m a bit stuck.

    I have a 2008 Toyota Prius with about 90,200 miles on it. There are no warning lights on the dash and no fault codes showing on diagnostics.


    The issue started suddenly after refuelling. Since then, the problem comes and goes. Some days the car drives completely normally, and other times it struggles.


    When it happens, the engine gets very loud but the car doesn’t accelerate properly. It does move, but it feels like driving uphill or like being in the wrong gear in a manual car (even though this is an automatic) — the engine sounds like it’s working hard but the power doesn’t really translate to the wheels. Even when just maintaining speed, the engine stays louder than normal. Sometimes it goes into limp mode, but it doesn’t stay that way and can clear on its own after a while or after switching the car off.


    RAC (UK breakdown assistance) suggested it could be a sticking throttle body and mentioned these faults can be intermittent.


    The first mechanic I took it to initially thought it might be a wiring or communication issue. He cleared the only fault code that had ever shown (this was when pressing the accelerator while parked, the engine wouldn’t rev). That particular issue hasn’t come back, but the main driving problem didn’t go away. He later changed his view and said it could be the catalytic converter.


    While the fault was present, he also looked at live data and noticed odd throttle behaviour — delayed response, the throttle opening slowly and then dropping back down even though my foot was still fully on the accelerator, and the throttle position sometimes showing 0%.


    I then took it to a second mechanic, who found no fault codes. He checked a few things and mentioned the purge valve as a possible cause, but said he wasn’t sure — someone he knew had a very similar problem on a Vauxhall, and in that case it turned out to be the purge valve. The 12V battery was showing about 64%, which he said may be a contributing factor (he mentioned being expensive to replace) so he mentioned not wanting to get me to change the battery and that not being the problem.


    Since I’ve owned the car, I’ve also had some intermittent electrical quirks, like the screen flickering and the radio or heater turning off randomly, though this has been happening on and off for a long time.


    At this point I’m honestly a bit confused about what to do next. Could this be a hybrid battery issue, wiring/grounding, throttle body/sensor problem, or even a catalytic converter? I’d appreciate any guidance on what might make sense.

    Thanks in advance for any advice — I’d really appreciate it.
     
    #1 Zanga, Jan 24, 2026 at 5:45 AM
    Last edited: Jan 24, 2026 at 5:50 AM
  2. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    Location:
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    Vehicle:
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    These symptoms are consistent with what happens when the hybrid vehicle battery get low on capacity. If you can find someone to do a round of reconditioning charge/discharge cycles it may restore enough capacity to get you by for a few more years.

    You can get the Dr. Prius app and a compatible OBDII dongle to run its battery test which will give you a rough idea of your battery's health.

    Unfortunately, not living in the UK, I can't recommend anyone to you. Hopefully, some of our UK members can help you with that. Don't be talked into exchanging your battery for a reconditioned one, though.

    If you do find your battery is end of life, then a new battery from Toyota is the option you will be looking at. Everything else you might see is a bandaid to buy you time to save up for a new battery. Think of this job in the same way you would for a transmission overhaul in a Vauxhall.