How to Stop E10 Petrol Damaging Your Older Car This Summer

Jaguar Classic E-type Commemorative: Jewel and Machine (image courtesy Jaguar)
Jaguar Classic E-type Commemorative: Jewel and Machine (image courtesy Jaguar)
Jaguar Classic E-type Commemorative: Jewel and Machine (image courtesy Jaguar)
Jaguar Classic E-type Commemorative: Jewel and Machine (image courtesy Jaguar)

If your car was built before 2011 and you fill it with the standard green pump petrol, the warm months are the riskiest time of year for the fuel sitting in your tank. The everyday petrol sold at almost every UK forecourt is E10, a blend containing up to 10 percent ethanol. That ethanol is good for cutting carbon emissions, but it is corrosive, it attracts water, and in older engines and cars that sit unused for weeks it can quietly cause damage that runs into hundreds of pounds. Summer, when classics come out for occasional weekend runs and then sit again, is exactly when the problems show up.

The fix is cheap and simple, and most owners of older cars already half know it. The point worth nailing down is which vehicles are genuinely at risk, what the ethanol does, and why a car left standing in a hot garage is more vulnerable than one driven every day. Get those right and you can avoid a fuel system rebuild that no one wants to pay for.

Which cars are at risk from E10

The government’s own guidance is blunt about it. Classic cars, cars built before 2002 and some models built in the early 2000s are not compatible with E10 and should run on E5 instead. As a rule of thumb, anyone with a car first registered before 2011 should check compatibility before assuming the standard pump is safe. The vast majority of cars made from 2011 onward were built to run on E10 without trouble, and almost all petrol cars made after 2019 are approved for it.

You can check your own car using the government’s E10 compatibility tool, which asks for the make, model and year. Owners of motorbikes, mopeds, classic vehicles, some marine engines and older garden equipment should be especially careful, because these often use rubber, plastic and metal components that the higher ethanol content can attack. If in doubt, the manufacturer’s handbook or owners’ club will usually have a definitive answer for your exact model.

What E10 actually does to an older engine

Ethanol causes three distinct problems in vehicles that were not designed for it. First, it is a solvent and is mildly corrosive, so a higher concentration raises the risk of damage to metal, plastic and rubber in the fuel system. That can mean perished fuel lines, failing seals and corroded carburettor parts, the sort of components that are fiddly and expensive to replace on an older car.

Second, ethanol is hygroscopic, meaning it absorbs water from the air. Over time that water can separate out and settle in the fuel system, where it encourages internal corrosion and can cause poor running or hard starting. Third, when ethanol blended fuel is left to sit it degrades faster than older style petrol, forming gum and varnish deposits that clog jets, injectors and filters. None of this is dramatic on a car driven daily, because the fuel is used and replaced before it can do harm. It is the standing time that does the damage.

Why summer heat and storage make it worse

Classic and weekend cars tend to be used in short bursts through the summer and then parked for days or weeks between outings. That standing time is when ethanol absorbs moisture and when deposits form. Warm conditions speed up the chemistry, and a humid garage gives the ethanol plenty of water to draw in. The result is a car that started fine in May running roughly or refusing to fire in August, with the owner none the wiser that the fuel itself is the culprit.

The same logic applies to the lawnmower, the strimmer and the motorbike that only comes out in good weather. Anything with a small petrol engine that sits between uses is exposed to the same water absorption and gumming. After the unusually warm May this year, garages and storage units have been hotter than normal, which only sharpens the risk for cars laid up between trips. Our guide to summer heat and your tyres covers another seasonal hazard that catches out drivers who store a car and assume it is ready to go.

How to protect your car

The simplest protection is to use the right fuel. E5 super unleaded, the 97 octane and higher grade, contains a maximum of 5 percent ethanol and is still sold at most larger forecourts. For a pre 2011 car, classic or weekend vehicle, fill with E5 super rather than the standard E10 green pump. It costs more per litre, but it is far cheaper than a fuel system repair, and the higher octane suits many older performance engines anyway. Spotting the right pump is easy once you know the labels, because every UK forecourt must display a black E10 or E5 marking inside a circle on the pump and nozzle, with E5 almost always sold as the more expensive super unleaded grade. It is also worth knowing that E10 delivers slightly worse fuel economy than E5 in any car, because ethanol holds less energy than petrol, so the cheaper pump price is partly offset by marginally more frequent fills.

If a car is going to be stored for several weeks, there are a few extra steps worth taking. Fill the tank close to full before storage, which leaves less air space for moisture to condense in. Consider a fuel stabiliser additive designed for ethanol blends, which slows the degradation and helps protect the system during a layup. Run the engine occasionally to circulate fresh fuel, and keep the car somewhere as dry as possible. When you take a stored car out for the first time after a long break, expect it may need a little coaxing and let it warm through before driving hard.

If you do accidentally fill a compatible older car with E10, do not panic and do not drain the tank. Unlike putting petrol in a diesel, one tank of E10 will not usually cause lasting harm. It may make the car pink under load or start poorly from cold, and the advice is simply to top up with E5 as soon as you can to dilute the ethanol content.

What it costs and what happens next

The price difference between standard E10 and E5 super is typically 10p to 20p a litre, so filling a 50 litre tank with super costs roughly 5 to 10 pounds more. Set against the cost of replacing perished fuel lines, a corroded carburettor or a clogged injection system, which can run well into three figures and more on a cherished classic, that premium is small insurance, and it buys peace of mind for a car that may be difficult or costly to source parts for. With pump prices already high after a turbulent spring, no owner wants an avoidable repair on top, and our latest look at where petrol prices are heading shows the wider cost picture for drivers this summer.

E5 super is protected for now, but its long term future is not guaranteed, and historic vehicle groups continue to press for it to remain widely available. For the time being the message for owners of older cars is unchanged and straightforward to follow. Check whether your car is compatible, use E5 super if it is not, take care over storage through the warm months, and the standard green pump need never become an expensive mistake. If your nearest forecourt has stopped stocking E5 super, fuel finder apps that map local grades can help you track down a station that still does, and many owners simply keep a few litres of stabilised E5 in an approved container for a car that is used only occasionally.


Sources:

  • https://www.gov.uk/guidance/e10-petrol-explained
  • https://www.gbnews.com/lifestyle/cars/classic-car-warning-e10-petrol-engine-damage
  • https://www.hagerty.co.uk/press-release/why-new-e10-eco-fuel-could-damage-your-classic-car/
  • https://www.adrianflux.co.uk/blog/2023/03/e10-petrol-classic-cars/
  • https://www.hcva.co.uk/81/hcva-news/hcva-campaign-updates/is-e10-ethanol-petrol-ok-for-historic-vehicles

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the founder of Motoring Chronicle and an FIA accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following motorsport and the global automotive industry. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered Formula 1 races and automotive events at venues around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every race report, car review, and industry analysis he writes. His work spans the full breadth of motoring — from the latest EV launches and road car reviews to the cutting edge of motorsport competition.

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