Oil Manual

How to check your engine oil

Guide · Maintenance

Park on level ground with the engine off, pull and wipe the dipstick, reinsert it fully, then read the level against the marks. Note the level and the oil's color and feel, and top up or change only with the grade your owner's manual specifies.

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.

How to read the dipstick

Park on level ground and switch the engine off. If your manual asks you to check warm, run the engine briefly, then wait the time it specifies so the oil can drain back into the pan. Open the hood, find the dipstick (usually a loop or colored handle), and pull it out.

Wipe the dipstick clean with a lint-free cloth, then push it all the way back in and pull it out again. This second reading is the accurate one. Hold it horizontally and look at the film of oil near the tip. There are two marks, often labeled minimum and maximum or shown as a crosshatched zone. The oil should sit between them. Many vehicles now use an electronic oil reading instead of a dipstick, in which case follow the on-screen procedure in your manual.

Level, color and condition

The level tells you whether to top up. If it sits near or below the lower mark, add oil a little at a time, rechecking between additions, and stop within the marked range. Overfilling can be as harmful as running low, so do not exceed the upper mark. Only ever add the viscosity grade and specification your owner’s manual lists.

Color and feel give a rough sense of condition, not a precise verdict. Fresh oil is amber and translucent; used oil darkens normally as it picks up combustion by-products. Oil that looks milky or has a coffee-colored froth, smells strongly of fuel, or contains gritty particles can point to a problem rather than a simple top-up. In those cases, have a mechanic inspect the engine rather than assuming an oil change alone will fix it.

When checking matters most

Check the level before long journeys, after noticing any oil spots where you park, and at the intervals your manual recommends. If the level keeps dropping between checks, note how much you are adding and over what distance. Steady consumption is worth discussing with a mechanic, because the cause matters more than simply keeping the oil topped up.

Frequently asked questions

Should the engine be hot or cold when I check oil?

Most manuals say check with the engine off and either slightly warm or fully cool, on level ground, so the oil has drained back and settled. Follow the exact procedure and timing your manual gives, since some cars specify a short wait after running.

How often should I check the oil level?

A common habit is once a month and before long trips, but your manual is the authority. Cars that use a little oil between changes benefit from more frequent checks.

Does dark oil mean it needs changing?

Not by itself. Oil naturally darkens as it does its job, so the change interval in your manual and the oil's overall condition matter more than color alone.