The Most Reliable Diesel Engines for the Used Market (2026)
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The Most Reliable Diesel Engines for the Used Market (2026)

EngineScope

Most of Europe's used diesels are imported from Germany and the Netherlands, and reliability swings wildly between generations of the same engine family. A Volkswagen TDI can be a million-kilometre legend or a money pit depending on which one you buy. This guide ranks the diesels worth owning — and flags the ones that will empty your wallet — using EngineScope's reliability scores, the models each engine powers, documented failure modes, and real repair costs.

Every score below comes from the engine's documented issues, repair-cost data, and failure patterns. Click any engine for its full report.

The most reliable diesel engines

Rank Engine Brand Score Verdict
1 OM606 Mercedes-Benz 96/100 BEST
2 1.9 TDI (ALH/AHF/ASV) Volkswagen 92/100 BEST
3 OM648 Mercedes-Benz 90/100 BEST
4 OM654 Mercedes-Benz 85/100 BEST
5 1GD-FTV Toyota 85/100 BEST
6 M57 BMW 84/100 BUY
7 1.5 dCi (K9K) Renault 82/100 BUY
8 OM642 Mercedes-Benz 82/100 BUY
9 3.0 V6 TDI Audi 80/100 BUY
10 1.6 CRDi (D4FB) Hyundai/Kia 80/100 BUY
11 B47 BMW 80/100 BUY
12 2.0 TDI CR (EA189/288) Volkswagen 78/100 BUY
13 Skyactiv-D 2.2 Mazda 78/100 BUY
14 2.0 HDi (DW10) PSA 78/100 BUY

See the full list on the Best Diesel Engines page.

The legends

OM606 (Mercedes-Benz) — 96/100 → The benchmark. Mercedes' 3.0 inline-six diesel from the 1990s is mechanical, over-built, and routinely passes 500,000 km. The pre-electronic versions are the most bulletproof diesel ever scored here. Found in: Mercedes-Benz 300D, E 300D (W124 / W210).

1.9 TDI ALH/AHF/ASV (Volkswagen) — 92/100 → The people's million-kilometre engine. Simple pump-injector design, no DPF, no timing chain to fail — the single most reliable diesel in the mainstream used market. Found in: VW Golf, Passat, Polo, Touran; Audi A3, A4, A6; SEAT Ibiza, Leon, Alhambra; Škoda Octavia, Fabia, Superb.

OM648 (Mercedes-Benz) — 90/100 → Mercedes' refined straight-six common-rail diesel (E 320 CDI era). Found in: Mercedes-Benz C-Class, E-Class, S-Class.

OM654 (Mercedes-Benz) — 85/100 → Proof Mercedes fixed its diesels. The 2016+ workhorse and the engine to look for in a recent used diesel. Found in: Mercedes-Benz A-Class, C-Class (C 220d), E-Class (E 220d), CLA, GLA, GLC, GLE, S-Class.

1GD-FTV (Toyota) — 85/100 → Toyota's modern 2.8 diesel — built for places without dealerships, which is exactly why it scores so high. Found in: Toyota Hilux, Land Cruiser, Avensis.

Safe modern buys

If you want something from the last 15 years rather than a classic, these earned a BUY verdict:

Diesels to avoid

These have documented, expensive failure modes. Walk away — or negotiate hard.

  • JLR Ingenium 2.0D pre-2019 — 28/100 → — the lowest-scoring diesel here. In: Jaguar XE, XF; Land Rover Discovery Sport, Range Rover Evoque.
  • BMW N47 — 35/100 → — the infamous rear-mounted timing chain. When it fails it destroys the engine, and replacement runs €2,500–6,000 because the gearbox must come out to reach it. EGR and DPF problems pile on another €500–1,200. In: BMW 1, 3, 5 Series, X1, X3; MINI Cooper, Countryman, Clubman.
  • Mercedes OM651 (early) — 38/100 → — early versions had injector and timing-chain issues; the later OM651 and the OM654 are far safer. In: Mercedes A-, B-, C-, E-Class, CLA, GLA, GLC, GLE, GLK.
  • VW V10 TDI 5.0 — 38/100 → (in: VW Touareg) and VW/Audi 2.5 V6 TDI — 40–42/100 → (in: VW Passat, Touareg; Škoda Superb) — complex, costly, and not worth the risk on the used market.

What to check before buying any used diesel

  1. Short-trip history kills diesels. A DPF needs motorway runs to regenerate. A car driven only around town will clog its DPF — a €400–1,200 job on a Hyundai/Kia 1.6 CRDi, more on others.
  2. Know where the timing chain lives. Rear-mounted chains (BMW N47) are the expensive ones. Belt-driven engines like the 1.9 TDI are cheap to service.
  3. Look for EGR and injector service records. EGR fouling is the most common moderate-cost diesel fault across almost every family here.
  4. Match the engine to your use. Buy a diesel only if you drive long distances regularly. For short urban trips, a reliable petrol or hybrid will cost you far less in the long run.

Check any engine's full issue list, repair costs, and mileage risk timeline on its EngineScope report before you buy.