Warning — Address SoonCode: C1210

Brake Fluid Level Sensor Fault

The electronic brake controller has picked up an erratic or out-of-spec voltage signal from the fluid level switch on the brake master cylinder reservoir. This triggers immediate safety warnings on your dashboard because the car cannot verify if it has adequate brake fluid pressure.

Nissan Leaf (2011+)Toyota bZ4X (2023+)Tesla Model 3, Model X, Model S (2017+)Tesla, Nissan, Toyota Model 3, Leaf, bZ4X (2020+)

Estimated Cost

$140

Repair Time

1 hour

Difficulty

DIY Friendly

Can I Fix This Myself?

DIY-Friendly Repair

Many owners resolve this with basic tools at home.

Tools you'll need:

OBD2 scannerMultimeterBasic hand tools

Follow the step-by-step wizard below. If the issue persists after working through all steps, it's time to schedule a professional service appointment.

Step-by-Step Fix Instructions

  1. 1

    Pop the front hood, locate the clear brake fluid reservoir, and top off fluid to the full line.

  2. 2

    Check the exterior of the master cylinder body and wheel calipers for visible hydraulic oil leaks.

  3. 3

    Unplug the small low-voltage electrical clip on the side of the plastic fluid tank and look for bent pins.

  4. 4

    Spray specialized electrical cleaning fluid into the terminal pins to strip away any surface corrosion.

  5. 5

    Test sensor resistance values using a standard multimeter while toggling the internal float mechanism.

  6. 6

    Replace the integrated brake fluid level sensor switch or install a fresh master cylinder reservoir tank.

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Step-by-Step Diagnostic Wizard

Answer each question to narrow down the root cause of your C1210 fault.

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