OBD-II trouble code
U043C: Invalid Data Received From Cruise Control Front Distance Range Sensor (Right)
A module is receiving messages from the right front distance range sensor, but the data inside them is implausible or out of range. The link is alive — the content is wrong. Can disable adaptive cruise and forward safety features.
Quick facts
- System
- Network
- Category
- Network Communication
- Severity
- Medium severity
- Drivable
- Usually safe to drive short-term
- Repair cost range
- $100 – $1,300
- DIY difficulty
- Shop recommended
What does U043C mean?
The front distance range sensor is the forward-looking radar (or radar/camera unit) that measures the distance and closing speed to vehicles ahead for adaptive cruise control and, on many vehicles, forward-collision warning and automatic emergency braking. On systems that use more than one forward sensor, U043C refers specifically to the right-side unit; U043B covers the left-side unit, and U0433 covers a single or center sensor. U043C sets when a receiving module is still hearing from the right front distance sensor, but the data in its messages is invalid: a value is out of range, implausible, or contradicts what other modules or a paired sensor see. The link is alive; the content can't be trusted. That is the key difference from a lost-communication code, which means the sensor has gone completely silent.
Because the fault is bad data rather than a dead bus, the causes cluster around whatever makes the sensor report wrong information. A blocked or dirty sensor face — ice, snow, mud, or road film — is one of the most common and easily fixed causes, since the radar can't see clearly and reports implausible ranges. Sensor misalignment after front-end bodywork, a bumper impact, or a parking knock is another leading cause; even a small angular error throws off the data. Low system voltage can make the sensor's output unreliable. The sensor's own software or calibration can be at fault if it was never properly recalibrated after service, and corroded connectors or chafed wiring behind the front fascia can corrupt otherwise-good messages in transit. A failing sensor is also possible.
Symptoms center on driver-assistance features. You may see a check engine light plus an adaptive-cruise or forward-collision warning, adaptive cruise control that won't engage, automatic emergency braking marked unavailable, or a message to clean the front sensor or that a driver-assist feature is off. The vehicle stays driveable because base braking, steering, and standard (non-adaptive) cruise where fitted continue to work — you lose the automated distance-keeping and forward-collision protection — which is why U043C is medium severity. Because these are safety features, treat their loss seriously and get it diagnosed. Since U043C can be secondary, read the full list — a companion radar or calibration code often names the real root cause.
Common causes
- Blocked or dirty sensor face — ice, snow, mud, or road film
- Sensor misalignment after front-end bodywork or a bumper impact
- Low system voltage or a weak battery/charging system
- Sensor not recalibrated after service or windshield/bumper work
- Corroded connectors or chafed wiring behind the front fascia
- Outdated, corrupted, or mismatched sensor software/calibration
- Failing right front distance range sensor
Symptoms
- Check engine light with an adaptive-cruise or forward-collision warning
- Adaptive cruise control won't engage
- Automatic emergency braking marked unavailable
- 'Clean front sensor' or 'driver assist unavailable' message
- Companion radar or calibration codes stored alongside U043C
- Base braking, steering, and standard cruise unaffected
Diagnostic steps
- 1.Read ALL stored codes first — U043C is often secondary to a radar or calibration code that names the fault.
- 2.Inspect the right front sensor face and the fascia in front of it for dirt, ice, snow, or damage, and clean it.
- 3.Check for recent front-end work or impacts that could have knocked the sensor out of alignment.
- 4.Check battery and charging system voltage; low voltage causes implausible sensor data.
- 5.Use a scan tool to view the sensor's live range/target data and compare right and left sensors where both exist.
- 6.Inspect wiring and connectors behind the front fascia for corrosion and chafing.
- 7.Perform the manufacturer's radar alignment/calibration procedure after any repair or if misalignment is suspected.
Repair cost
$100 – $1,300
Cost depends on the cause. Cleaning a blocked sensor is free to trivial. A radar alignment/calibration is typically $150-$400. Correcting low voltage varies. A replacement front distance radar sensor is the expensive item at $500-$1,300 including the required calibration, depending on the vehicle. A module reflash is $100-$300 — but because a dirty or misaligned sensor is so common, confirm those before replacing the sensor.
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.