Two different mistakes
“The wrong oil” can mean two separate things, and they are not equally serious. One is the wrong viscosity, meaning a grade heavier or lighter than your manual lists, such as 5W-40 instead of 5W-30. The other is the wrong specification, meaning the oil does not meet the API, ILSAC, ACEA, or OEM standard your engine requires.
Keeping these apart matters. Viscosity is about thickness and flow. Specification is about the oil’s performance level, including its additives and how it was tested. You can have the right grade with the wrong spec, or the reverse.
What the risks actually look like
For viscosity, a grade that is slightly off usually causes modest, short-term effects: reduced fuel economy, slower flow on cold starts, or a small change in oil pressure. These are real but rarely cause sudden damage from one fill.
For specification, the stakes can be higher in certain engines. Many modern turbocharged gasoline direct-injection engines need oils tested to limit low-speed pre-ignition, sometimes called LSPI, which can stress an engine. Some engines also rely on a specific spec to protect timing chains and control deposits. Using oil without the required standard removes those protections over time. A wrong spec can also affect warranty coverage.
What to do next
If you have already added the wrong oil, do not panic. A single fill of a close oil is usually manageable for a short period if there are no warning lights, abnormal noises, leaks, or oil-pressure symptoms. Drive gently and avoid heavy loads or extended high-speed running until you can correct it.
Then have the proper oil installed, ideally at or before your next scheduled change. Open your owner’s manual and confirm both numbers: the viscosity grade and the required specification. Match both, keep your receipts, and you have done what the engine maker asks. When unsure, ask a trusted technician rather than guessing.