If your Ford diesel is showing a P20EE fault code, the first thing to know is this: it usually points to an SCR efficiency issue rather than one simple failed part. That is why guessing can get expensive. This guide explains what P20EE means on a Ford, what symptoms often show up with it, what should be checked first, and when it makes sense to move from internet searching to proper fault diagnosis.
Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent
Staffordshire coverage
What does P20EE mean on a Ford diesel?
Table of Contents
ToggleThat is why this code catches a lot of owners out. You plug in a scanner, you see P20EE, and the natural reaction is to search for one part to replace. In reality, the code is more of a system-performance clue than a neat one-part diagnosis.
On many Ford diesel vehicles, P20EE sits in the same wider problem area as AdBlue faults, NOx-related issues, injector concerns, poor-quality dosing, sensor readings that do not make sense, or a system that is no longer performing as expected under real running conditions.
So the fault code matters, but the context matters more. The question is not only “what does P20EE mean?” The useful question is “why is my Ford logging P20EE now?”
That is where a diagnostics-led route is far stronger than guessing, because the same code can be triggered by different paths.
What symptoms often show up with a P20EE code?
Ford owners usually do not search this code out of curiosity. They search it because something else has already started happening.
Common symptoms can include:
- engine management light on
- AdBlue or emissions warning messages
- reduced power or a flatter drive
- warning countdowns on some vehicles
- poor restart confidence or no-start concerns if the issue is left too long
- repeat fault clearing followed by the same code coming back
Some drivers notice almost no change at first apart from the light. Others get a vehicle that feels restricted or starts pushing them towards a more urgent warning stage. That difference is one reason why online advice can be confusing. One owner says the van still drives normally. Another says it was in limp mode within days. Both can still be dealing with P20EE.
If your Ford is already showing repeat warnings, it usually makes sense to stop clearing the code and start thinking about proper checks instead.
Why P20EE is not just an “AdBlue pump fault” code
One of the most common mistakes is assuming that P20EE always means the AdBlue pump has failed. It can be related to dosing performance, but the code itself is broader than that. It points to SCR efficiency falling below what the system expects.
That means several different problems can lead you to the same code, including:
AdBlue quality or delivery issues
If the system is not dosing properly, the SCR process may not perform as intended.
NOx sensor-related faults
If readings are off, the vehicle can believe the system is underperforming even when the root problem sits elsewhere.
Injector or crystallisation problems
Poor spray pattern, restricted flow, or deposits can affect how the system works.
Wider SCR efficiency problems
The system may simply not be delivering the emissions reduction expected under load and temperature.
This is why part-swapping based on forums can go badly wrong. The code gives direction, but it does not give permission to guess. A Ford diesel with P20EE needs the system looked at as a whole, not reduced to one favourite internet answer.
What should be checked first on a Ford showing P20EE?
If you want to approach the fault properly, start with checks that help narrow the system down instead of jumping straight to replacement parts.
The useful first checks normally include:
- Reading the full fault picture
Do you only have P20EE, or are there supporting codes around NOx, AdBlue pressure, dosing, or related emissions faults? - Looking at warning history
Has the issue just appeared, or has it already been cleared and returned? - Checking how the vehicle is behaving
Is it only a light, or are there changes in power, restarts, or countdown warnings? - Assessing likely SCR system performance
The key is whether the system is actually doing its job properly rather than just whether one component appears active. - Avoiding blind parts replacement
A guessed fix can add cost and still leave the same fault active.
Those steps sound simple, but they change the whole repair path. They move you away from “what part do I buy?” and towards “what exactly is this Ford unhappy with?”
Common causes of P20EE on Ford diesel vehicles
Although the fault should always be diagnosed properly, there are a few patterns that regularly sit behind P20EE on diesel Fords.
| Likely cause area | Why it matters | What it can lead to |
|---|---|---|
| AdBlue delivery problem | The system may not be dosing correctly | SCR efficiency falls and P20EE returns |
| NOx sensor issue | Incorrect readings can distort how the system judges emissions performance | False or repeated efficiency faults |
| Crystallisation or injector restriction | Dosing pattern or volume may be affected | Poor SCR operation and repeat warnings |
| Long-running unresolved AdBlue fault | The system may have been underperforming for some time | More persistent emissions faults and stronger warnings |
| Misdiagnosed previous repair | The original cause may never have been fixed | Code keeps returning after money has already been spent |
The point is not that all of these are equally likely every time. The point is that P20EE lives in a fault family where several things can trigger the same complaint. That is exactly why a proper check matters more than a guess.
Can you keep driving with a P20EE fault code?
Some Ford owners do keep driving for a while, especially if the vehicle still feels usable. But that does not always mean it is wise to leave it. Emissions-system faults have a habit of becoming more serious once the vehicle keeps failing its own checks.
What starts as one code can turn into stronger warnings, repeated lights, reduced performance, or restart-related stress depending on how the system progresses and how the vehicle reacts.
If the code has appeared once and the car still drives normally, that is the point to act early rather than late. If the code has already returned after being cleared, the case for proper diagnosis becomes much stronger.
Early action tends to leave more options on the table. Waiting usually narrows them.
Why clearing P20EE rarely solves the real issue
Fault clearing has its place during diagnosis, but it is not a fix on its own. If the reason for the code is still there, the vehicle will usually find it again.
That is why so many owners end up frustrated. The light goes out, the vehicle seems better for a short period, and then the same code comes back. At that point, all that has really changed is time.
Clearing the code can sometimes help confirm whether the issue is immediate or intermittent, but it should not be confused with solving it. A repeated P20EE usually means the Ford is consistently seeing the same efficiency problem rather than a random one-off event.
That makes the next step clear. Stop measuring progress by whether the light is currently off. Measure it by whether the root cause has been identified.
Repair, removal, or something else: what route fits P20EE?
This is where drivers often want a simple universal answer, but the correct route depends on what the diagnosis actually shows. Pro Remapping already supports AdBlue repair, AdBlue delete, and AdBlue removal, so the sensible path is to match the service to the confirmed problem.
In some cases, the right next step is a repair-led route because the issue sits around how the system is currently performing. In other cases, owners searching around P20EE are already looking at wider AdBlue service options because of repeated failure, cost frustration, or ongoing warnings.
The key point is this: do not choose the route first and try to force the diagnosis to fit it. Choose the route after the fault picture is clear.
When repair-led thinking makes sense
Usually when the problem looks identifiable, recent, and capable of being resolved through proper fault correction.
When owners start considering wider options
Usually after repeated system issues, repeat warning returns, or frustration with ongoing emissions faults.
This keeps the article useful without pretending every P20EE case has the same end point.
How Ford-specific fault searches should lead into a commercial page
A support article like this should answer the search, but it should also guide the reader towards the right next action. That is the commercial value of model-specific and fault-code-led content.
If someone searches “p20ee ford”, they are often already problem-aware and close to action. They do not need a broad explanation of what AdBlue is. They need clarity, then a route into service pages that fit the problem.
That is why this topic naturally supports:
That link path helps move the visitor from fault research into an actual enquiry without forcing a hard sell too early.
What should you do if your Ford has P20EE right now?
If the code has just appeared, start by resisting the urge to guess. If the code has already come back once, stop treating it as a one-off. If the vehicle is already showing stronger warnings, make it a proper priority.
A sensible next step usually looks like this:
- Confirm the full fault picture, not just one code.
- Note any warning messages, countdowns, or performance changes.
- Think about whether this is the first appearance or a repeat issue.
- Match the outcome to the right service route, not the cheapest internet guess.
- Use a specialist service page as the next step instead of staying stuck in forum loops.
If you are local to Stoke-on-Trent or wider Staffordshire, that usually means moving into the relevant AdBlue service page or making direct contact to get the fault looked at properly.
Final answer: what causes P20EE on a Ford diesel?
P20EE on a Ford diesel usually points to the SCR system underperforming, but that does not mean there is only one cause. The fault can sit around AdBlue delivery, sensor-related readings, dosing performance, crystallisation, or a wider efficiency problem in the emissions setup.
That is why the best answer is not a guessed part. It is a proper check of why the system is failing its efficiency target in the first place. Some vehicles will suit a repair-led route. Some owners will be looking at wider AdBlue service options because the issue has become repeated or expensive. The right next step depends on the confirmed fault picture.
If you want to avoid parts roulette, treat P20EE as a system fault that needs narrowing down, not a code that can be solved by instinct.
Need help with a Ford P20EE fault?
If your Ford diesel is showing P20EE, AdBlue warnings, or repeat emissions faults, speak to Pro Remapping and move the problem into the right service path. Whether the answer is diagnosis, AdBlue repair, or another supported service route, the key is getting the fault narrowed down properly first.
Based in Hanley and covering Stoke-on-Trent and wider Staffordshire for AdBlue, DPF, remapping, and diagnostics-led vehicle fault support.
FAQs
What does P20EE mean on a Ford diesel?
It usually means the SCR system is not reducing emissions as effectively as expected, which points to an AdBlue or wider SCR performance issue rather than one guaranteed failed part.
Can a NOx sensor cause P20EE?
It can be part of the wider fault picture because incorrect readings can affect how the system judges SCR efficiency.
Can I keep driving with P20EE showing?
Some vehicles will still drive, but leaving the issue can lead to repeat warnings, stronger restrictions, or more urgent dashboard messages.
Will clearing the P20EE code fix it?
No. Clearing the code may remove the light briefly, but if the cause is still there the vehicle will usually log it again.
Which Pro Remapping page should I check next?
Start with AdBlue Repair if you want a repair-led route, then review AdBlue Delete or AdBlue Removal if your fault history and service need point you that way.