Symptoms / Car won’t start (clicks or cranks but won’t fire)
Car won’t start (clicks or cranks but won’t fire)
Address promptlyA no-start splits into two cases: the engine won’t crank (usually electrical) or cranks but won’t fire (fuel or spark).
What this usually means
When you turn the key and nothing happens, the cause depends on what you hear. A single click or rapid clicking with dashboard lights dimming usually means a dead battery or a starter problem — an electrical issue. If the engine cranks (turns over) but won’t catch and run, the problem is more likely fuel, spark, or a sensor that tells the computer the engine is turning. Narrowing down “won’t crank” versus “cranks but won’t start” is the single most useful first step.
Most likely causes
- highDead or weak batteryBy far the most common no-start cause, especially in cold weather or after lights were left on. Often shows as clicking and dim lights.
- highCorroded or loose battery terminalsPoor connections mimic a dead battery and are a quick, cheap fix once spotted.
- mediumFailing starter motorA single loud click with a good battery often points to the starter rather than the battery.
- mediumFuel delivery problemIf it cranks but won’t fire, a failed fuel pump or empty rail may be starving the engine.
- lowCrankshaft position sensor failureWithout this signal the computer won’t fire spark or fuel, so the engine cranks but never starts.
Is it safe to drive?
Typical fix & cost
If it’s the battery or terminals, the fix is cheap and fast. A starter or fuel pump is a bigger job. Because a no-start can be electrical or fuel/spark, confirming the symptom (crank vs. no-crank) before throwing parts at it saves the most money here.
Typical range: $20–$700
Cleaning terminals or a battery is cheap; a starter or fuel pump is the high end.
The price depends on which cause it turns out to be — so confirm the cause before paying. Diagnose this for my exact vehicle →
Frequently asked
How do I tell if it’s the battery or the starter?
If a jump start gets it going, suspect the battery or charging system. If you have a healthy battery but hear one loud click and no crank, the starter is the more likely culprit.
Seeing this on your car? Get a diagnosis specific to your exact year, make and model — RedlineAi ranks the likely causes against real recall and complaint data, with an honest confidence score.
Diagnose my vehicle →Related OBD-II codes
If your car has stored a trouble code, these often accompany this symptom:
Related symptoms
This is general guidance, not a substitute for a hands-on inspection. Cost ranges are broad estimates to set expectations, not quotes. For safety-related issues, have the car inspected by a licensed mechanic before driving.
