Start with the exact section name
Owner’s manuals do not all organize oil information the same way. One manual may list the oil grade in a maintenance chapter, capacity in a specifications table, and the interval in a separate schedule. Use the index and look for terms such as engine oil, lubricant, capacities, specifications, maintenance schedule, and severe service.
If your car has multiple engines, trims, or markets, make sure the table is for your exact engine. A model-year alone is not enough. The same vehicle name can use different engines and different oil requirements.
Separate grade from specification
Write the viscosity grade and the required specification as two separate notes. A grade such as 0W-20 or 5W-30 tells you how thick the oil is when cold and at operating temperature. A specification such as API SP, ILSAC GF-6A, ACEA C3, dexos1 Gen3, or VW 504.00/507.00 tells you the performance standard the oil must meet.
This distinction matters because two oils can share the same viscosity while only one carries the required approval. On a car that calls for an OEM approval, the bottle needs to show that exact approval, not just the right-looking grade.
Read alternatives conservatively
Some manuals list one preferred grade and one or more sanctioned alternatives. Treat the preferred grade as the default. Use an alternate only when the manual says it applies to your temperature range, market, or driving condition.
Do not treat “people online use it” as a manual-sanctioned alternate. Forum experience can be useful context, but it does not override the manufacturer’s requirement, especially while the car is under warranty or emissions coverage.
Capacity, filter, and interval are separate checks
Oil capacity is usually listed with and without filter. For a normal oil change, use the capacity with filter if you are replacing the filter at the same time. Add slightly less than the listed amount at first, check the dipstick or electronic reading, then top up carefully.
For intervals, compare the normal schedule with the severe-service schedule. Short trips, towing, repeated idling, dusty roads, and extreme temperatures often qualify as severe service. When in doubt, use the more conservative schedule or ask a mechanic who knows your vehicle and driving pattern.