Oil Manual

Do I need to change the oil filter every time?

Guide · Maintenance

Most manufacturers recommend fitting a new oil filter at every oil change, because the old filter traps contaminants and retains a small amount of dirty oil. The safest course is to follow the interval and procedure in your owner's manual.

Checklist

Manual-first oil check

  1. Find the exact oil section in the owner’s manual, not only a forum or retailer result.
  2. Write down the viscosity grade and the required specification as two separate requirements.
  3. Confirm engine, model year, market, and service schedule before buying oil or parts.
  4. Check capacity with filter and avoid overfilling.
  5. Keep a mileage/date note after the service so the next interval is clear.

Use this before buying oil, choosing an alternate grade, or changing the interval.

Why the filter matters

The oil filter’s job is to clean the oil as it circulates. It catches metal particles from normal wear, dirt, and combustion by-products before they can reach bearings and other close-tolerance parts. As the engine runs, the filter media gradually loads up with this debris. A fresh filter has plenty of capacity; an older one has less, and once it nears its limit some designs open a bypass valve so oil keeps flowing even though it is no longer being filtered as thoroughly.

A used filter also holds a small amount of oil inside it. When you drain and refill the engine but leave the old filter in place, that retained oil is dirty and mixes back into your fresh oil. It is a modest amount, but it works against the whole point of changing the oil.

What most manufacturers recommend

For these reasons, most manufacturers specify a new oil filter at every oil change, and the filter change is built into the standard service procedure. Replacing both together keeps filtration capacity and oil quality aligned, rather than pairing fresh oil with a partly spent filter.

The risk of routinely skipping the filter is not usually dramatic in the short term, but over many changes you are running the engine on oil that is less effectively cleaned and slightly contaminated from the start. Cumulatively, that can mean more wear than necessary.

The practical answer is to follow your owner’s manual. It will state the oil change interval, the correct filter part or specification, and whether the maker treats the filter as a per-change item. Some specialized or extended-interval services may differ, so the manual is the authority for your specific car. When in doubt, fitting a new filter with every oil change is the conservative, widely recommended choice.

Frequently asked questions

What does the oil filter actually do?

It captures metal particles, dirt, and combustion by-products so they don't circulate through the engine. Over time it fills up, which is why most makers replace it with each oil change.

Can I skip the filter and just change the oil?

You can, but the old filter leaves contaminated oil behind and may filter less effectively as it loads up. Most manufacturers advise a new filter every time, so check your manual.