California Toughens Smog Check Rules as Every OBD Monitor Must Now Pass

Thick smoke pours from the exhaust pile on a car (image courtesy Deposit Photos)
Thick smoke pours from the exhaust pile on a car (image courtesy Deposit Photos)
Thick smoke pours from the exhaust pile on a car (image courtesy Deposit Photos)
Thick smoke pours from the exhaust pile on a car (image courtesy Deposit Photos)

California drivers who breeze through a battery replacement or a minor repair are running into a new obstacle at the smog check station this year. The state’s Bureau of Automotive Repair adopted regulations, effective October 1, 2025 and now fully governing 2026 inspections, that require every applicable onboard diagnostic readiness monitor to show “ready” before a vehicle can pass, closing a longstanding exemption that let some monitors stay unset.

The change affects most gasoline vehicles from model year 1996 and newer, along with diesel vehicles from 1998 onward, which together make up the overwhelming majority of cars, trucks, and SUVs registered in the state. Roughly 10% of vehicles fail California’s smog check overall, and OBD-related failures already account for a 9.33% failure rate on initial tests, a share regulators expect to climb as the exemptions phase out.

What a Readiness Monitor Actually Does

A readiness monitor is a self-test a vehicle’s onboard computer runs continuously to confirm its emissions control systems, including the catalytic converter, oxygen sensors, evaporative emissions system, and exhaust gas recirculation valve, are functioning as designed. Every time a driver disconnects the battery, clears a diagnostic trouble code, or has certain repairs performed, these monitors reset to “not ready” and must complete a new full cycle of driving conditions before they report back as set.

Previously, California allowed a narrow list of exceptions. Gasoline vehicles from 1996 to 1999 could have any one monitor unset and still pass. Newer gasoline vehicles, 2000 and later, could have only the evaporative system monitor unset. Those exceptions existed for a practical reason: certain monitors, especially the evaporative system check, proved notoriously difficult to trigger in normal driving and rarely indicated an actual emissions problem when left incomplete.

Bureau of Automotive Repair officials say the old exemption list let some vehicles pass inspection with truly malfunctioning emissions equipment. A monitor that never ran could not flag a fault that existed. The bureau is rolling out the tightened standard in phases, using real-world data to determine when specific makes and models can reasonably be expected to set all monitors through ordinary driving before removing their remaining exceptions.

Diesel Vehicles Face the Strictest Standard

Diesel vehicles built between 1998 and 2006 face the toughest bar under the new rules, with no unset monitors allowed at all under the current phase. Diesel vehicles from 2007 onward retain a narrower exception, permitting only the diesel particulate filter and non-methane hydrocarbon (NMHC) monitors to remain unset. Fleet operators running older diesel trucks and vans should expect more failed inspections under the new standard than in prior years, especially on vehicles that have had recent exhaust system repairs.

Heavy-duty vehicles face a separate, later deadline. Starting in October 2027, all OBD-equipped heavy-duty vehicles from the 2013 model year forward must complete quarterly compliance tests, four times a year rather than the annual or biennial schedule most passenger vehicle owners are used to.

Why California Tightened a Rule That Was Already on the Books

The shift is less about writing new law and more about closing gaps left in the original OBD-II testing framework California adopted decades ago. Federal emissions standards have long required 1996 and newer vehicles to carry onboard diagnostic systems capable of monitoring their own emissions performance in real time, but state-level testing programs across the country have historically applied that requirement unevenly, allowing a patchwork of exceptions that grew over time as regulators tried to accommodate vehicles where certain monitors truly struggled to complete a self-test.

California’s Bureau of Automotive Repair says its 2026 data collection effort will determine, model by model, which vehicles can reasonably be expected to set every monitor and which still warrant a permanent exception for a documented design limitation. That data-driven approach means the rules facing a driver’s specific vehicle could tighten again within the next year or two as the bureau accumulates results, making it worth checking BAR’s published guidance periodically rather than assuming the current exception list stays fixed.

The Two-Week Rule Every California Driver Should Know

The most common trigger for a failed inspection under the new rules has nothing to do with an actual emissions defect. A battery replacement, a dead battery that drained overnight, or even a repair shop clearing a code in an unrelated fix will reset every readiness monitor to zero, and a vehicle driven straight to a smog check station the same day will fail regardless of how well it is running.

Most properly functioning vehicles reset all required monitors within two weeks of normal driving, according to industry guidance from the bureau’s network of licensed stations. Owners who need monitors to set faster can follow a manufacturer-specific drive cycle, typically found in the vehicle’s owner’s manual, which walks through a defined sequence of speeds and conditions designed to trigger each monitor’s self-test.

What to Do if a Monitor Won’t Set

Every reset restarts the two-week window from scratch, so avoid clearing diagnostic codes or disconnecting the battery repeatedly while troubleshooting a monitor that will not set. A typical drive cycle sequence starts the engine cold and idles for two to three minutes, then holds a steady 55 mph for roughly 10 minutes without cruise control engaged, followed by a coast-down to 20 mph without touching the brakes. The exact sequence varies by manufacturer and should come from the owner’s manual or a dealership service department rather than a generic online guide.

Drivers who have completed a full drive cycle and still cannot get a monitor to set have a path forward through California’s Smog Check Referee program, run at locations across the state under the “Ask the Ref” service. Referees provide a third-party evaluation and can grant a permanent exception for vehicles with a genuine design limitation that makes a specific monitor impossible to set under any driving conditions. Appointments typically run 50 minutes, and some services, such as an engine change evaluation, require two appointment slots.

Financial Help Is Available for Costly Repairs

Drivers facing a smog-related repair bill they cannot absorb can check their eligibility for California’s Consumer Assistance Program, which offers up to $1,200 in repair cost assistance once a driver has spent a minimum of $650 on emissions-related repairs at a licensed test-and-repair station. The program also offers a vehicle retirement option, paying eligible owners to retire a car that would cost more to fix than it is worth, rather than leaving them stuck between a failed inspection and an unaffordable repair bill.

What This Means for Buying or Selling a Used Car in California

The tightened standard adds a new wrinkle for anyone buying or selling a used vehicle in the state. A seller who recently disconnected a battery for storage or repair, common with vehicles that sit for weeks between owners, can hand a buyer a car that cannot pass a smog check until it accumulates enough drive time to reset its monitors. Buyers should ask sellers directly whether the battery has been disconnected recently or whether any diagnostic codes were cleared before the sale. A vehicle that looks and drives fine can still fail a required inspection for reasons that have nothing to do with mechanical condition.

Private-party sales in California already require a valid smog certificate in most cases before a title can transfer, and a vehicle stuck in “not ready” status can delay a sale by two weeks or more while monitors complete their cycle. Dealers selling certified pre-owned vehicles typically build in enough drive time before listing a car, but private sellers moving quickly to close a deal are the most likely to run into this timing problem.

Final Check for California Drivers in 2026

Drivers who have recently replaced a battery, had a check engine light diagnosed, or completed any repair involving a code clear should plan to drive the vehicle normally for at least two weeks before scheduling a smog check appointment. Booking the inspection too soon under the tightened 2026 rules is now the single most avoidable reason to fail, and a preventable failure means a second $56 test fee, a second appointment, and in some cases weeks of delay renewing a vehicle’s registration.


Sources:

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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