OBD-II trouble code
U0149: Lost Communication With Gateway D
A module on the network can no longer hear from gateway module 'D', one of the hubs that route messages between the vehicle's communication buses. Because a gateway bridges the networks, this can cause widespread communication faults. Usually a power, ground, wiring, or connector fault at the gateway.
Quick facts
- System
- Network
- Category
- Network Communication
- Severity
- High severity
- Drivable
- No — stop driving until repaired
- Repair cost range
- $150 – $1,200
- DIY difficulty
- Shop recommended
What does U0149 mean?
U0149 is set when a module on the vehicle's communication network stops receiving messages from gateway module 'D'. A gateway is a central hub that connects the vehicle's separate communication buses — for example a high-speed powertrain CAN bus, a slower body/comfort bus, and the diagnostic connector — and routes messages between them. On vehicles that spread this routing across multiple gateways, each is identified by a letter; 'D' is the fourth. It lets modules on one network share information with modules on another, and a gateway is usually part of the path a scan tool uses to reach modules through the OBD-II port. Because so much traffic depends on it, a gateway is a critical node.
The causes are the standard communication-code set, but the gateway's central role makes them more consequential. Gateway D may have lost power or ground through a blown fuse, a corroded ground, or a wiring fault. The bus wiring to the gateway may be damaged, or its connectors corroded or loose. The gateway itself can fail internally. Because a gateway bridges multiple networks, a problem there can break communication between whole sections of the vehicle at once, and it can make a scan tool unable to reach modules that are actually fine — they simply can't be reached because the bridge is down. Another module dragging down a bus the gateway connects to can also contribute.
The symptoms are often widespread rather than tied to one feature: multiple, seemingly unrelated communication codes set at once; warning lights across several systems; features that depend on cross-network data failing; and a scan tool that struggles to communicate with many modules or with the vehicle at all. Because losing a gateway can disrupt communication that the powertrain and safety systems rely on, U0149 is treated as a serious, generally not-driveable fault until the gateway's power, ground, and wiring are verified.
Common causes
- Blown fuse feeding gateway module D
- Corroded or loose ground for the gateway
- Damaged bus wiring to or from the gateway
- Corroded or loose connectors at the gateway
- Failed gateway module
- A fault on one of the connected buses pulling the network down
- Harness damage near the central electrical/gateway location
- Water intrusion at the gateway connector
Symptoms
- Multiple unrelated communication codes set at once
- Warning lights across several systems
- Features that depend on cross-network data not working
- Scan tool can't reach many modules or the vehicle at all
- Intermittent or total loss of module communication
- Possible no-start if powertrain data is disrupted
- Erratic, vehicle-wide electrical behavior
Diagnostic steps
- 1.Scan all modules and note the pattern — gateway faults often show many modules unreachable at once.
- 2.Confirm gateway D has power and a good ground; check its fuse(s).
- 3.Inspect the gateway connectors and nearby harness for corrosion, looseness, water intrusion, and damage.
- 4.Check each bus the gateway connects for shorts or a module dragging the network down before condemning the gateway.
- 5.Measure bus voltages at the gateway connector and verify continuity to the connected networks.
- 6.If power, ground, and the connected buses are good but the gateway still won't communicate, replace and program the gateway per the manufacturer procedure.
Repair cost
$150 – $1,200
A blown fuse, corroded ground, or connector repair is the cheapest fix at $150-$350 plus $200-$400 diagnostic time, since gateway faults can take longer to isolate. Wiring repair runs $250-$700. Gateway module replacement runs $400-$1,200+ including programming and configuration to the vehicle. Because a gateway bridges multiple networks, careful diagnosis to confirm the gateway itself is at fault — rather than a bus problem upstream — is essential before replacing it.
Estimate your repair
Run the numbers for your vehicle
Open the Repair Cost Estimator with module communication / can bus diagnosis preselected. Adjust labor rate and vehicle category to fit your situation.
DIY vs shop
Leave this one to a qualified shop. It typically involves emissions-critical components, refrigerant handling, or other work that requires manufacturer-grade tooling, training, or certification. DIY attempts often produce a more expensive problem than the original code.