Is Your Car Immobiliser Broken? Symptoms & Fixes

Quick answer: the classic signs of a broken car immobiliser are an engine that cranks but won’t fire, a flashing key or padlock symbol on the dash, central locking that’s stopped responding to the fob, and a key that works one minute and not the next. Below is how to check whether the immobiliser really is the problem — and what’s actually causing it, because more often than not the fault is in the key, not the car.

What the Immobiliser Actually Does

Every car sold in the UK since 1998 has an immobiliser as standard. It’s a simple handshake: a chip (transponder) inside your key sends a code, the car checks it, and only then will the engine management allow the engine to start. No valid code, no start — even with a perfectly good battery and starter motor.

That handshake is exactly where things go wrong. The chip can fail or work loose inside a damaged key, the key’s code can lose sync with the car, the aerial ring around the ignition that reads the chip can fail, or — less often — the immobiliser unit itself develops a fault.

How to Check If Your Immobiliser Is Working

Run through these in order — they take two minutes and tell you a lot:

  1. Look at the dash when you turn the key. A key or padlock symbol that flashes rapidly or stays lit when you try to start is the immobiliser saying it doesn’t recognise the key. On most cars, that light should appear briefly and then go out.
  2. Listen to what the engine does. If it cranks strongly but never fires, the battery and starter are fine — that points to the immobiliser cutting fuel or ignition. If it doesn’t crank at all, you’re more likely looking at a battery or starter problem instead.
  3. Try your spare key. This is the single most useful test. If the spare starts the car, your main key’s chip is the fault — a much cheaper fix. If neither key works, the problem is on the car’s side.
  4. Try the buttons on the fob. If central locking has also stopped responding, a flat fob battery or damaged fob is the likely culprit — though note the transponder chip itself doesn’t need the fob battery to work on most cars.
  5. Hold the key right against the ignition or start button and try again. If the car starts that way, the chip is sending a weak signal — a failing transponder or aerial ring. It will get worse; get it looked at before it strands you.

The Most Common Causes — Cheapest First

  • Flat fob battery — affects remote locking and keyless systems; a quick, cheap fix.
  • Damaged or failing key chip — keys get dropped, soaked, and chewed by life. A new key cut and programmed, from £79, solves it. See our key fob repair and replacement service.
  • Key lost sync with the car — the code pairing fails and the key needs re-programming to the immobiliser.
  • Faulty aerial ring or wiring around the ignition — the reader can’t pick up a healthy chip.
  • Immobiliser unit or ECU fault — the rarest and most involved, and the one people usually fear first. In our experience it’s far more often the key.

That ordering matters: most “my immobiliser is broken” calls turn out to be a key problem — which is good news, because a key is a from-£79 fix at your location, not an ECU bill.

Car won’t start and the key light is flashing?

We diagnose immobiliser faults at your location — most are fixed on the spot with a new programmed key.

Call 07777 676261

Immobiliser Light On and the Car Won’t Start — What to Do Right Now

  1. Lock the car, wait 30 seconds, unlock and try again. Some systems reset on a fresh lock cycle.
  2. Try the spare key. If it starts — drive on, and get the main key replaced before the spare fails too.
  3. Hold the key against the ignition barrel or start button. A weak chip can sometimes be read at point-blank range.
  4. Don’t keep cranking endlessly — you’ll flatten the battery and add a second problem on top of the first.
  5. If nothing works, call a mobile auto locksmith rather than booking a tow. We diagnose immobiliser faults at your location with dealer-grade equipment, and in most cases the fix — a new key, re-programming, or a repair — happens on the spot.

Not sure whether it’s the immobiliser, the battery, or the ignition? Our diagnostic guide walks the full decision tree: Car Won’t Start? Battery, Immobiliser, or Ignition.

One Honest Warning: Don’t “Bypass” the Immobiliser

You’ll find videos and cheap modules online promising to bypass a faulty immobiliser. Think hard before going there: it leaves your car with no theft protection, can cause running faults, and can put you in a difficult position with your insurer. The proper fix — a new programmed key or a repair to the reading hardware — usually costs less than people expect and keeps the car secure.

If Your Factory Immobiliser Feels Like It Isn’t Enough

The factory immobiliser stops the engine starting without a coded key — but modern thieves often don’t attack it at all. Relay attacks copy your keyless signal from outside the house, and OBD-port tools program a blank key in minutes. If your car is a theft target (Land Rover, premium German cars, and popular vans top the lists), an aftermarket immobiliser adds a layer the factory system doesn’t have: a PIN code entered on your own buttons before the car will move. We install both leading systems — see our Ghost 2 Immobiliser and CAN Phantom pages, or read the honest comparison of the two. Installation from £150.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my car immobiliser is broken?

The main signs: the engine cranks but won’t fire, a key or padlock light flashes on the dash, and the problem is intermittent — fine one day, dead the next. The quickest confirmation is trying your spare key: if the spare starts the car, your main key’s chip is the fault rather than the immobiliser itself.

Can a broken immobiliser stop a car from starting?

Yes — that’s its job. If the immobiliser doesn’t recognise a valid key code, it blocks the fuel or ignition system, so the engine cranks but never fires. The battery, starter, and engine can all be perfectly healthy.

How much does it cost to fix an immobiliser problem?

It depends on the cause. A replacement programmed key starts from £79, key repair from £50 — and most immobiliser callouts turn out to be key faults. Faults on the car’s side need diagnosing first; we do that at your location and quote before any work starts.

Will disconnecting the battery reset the immobiliser?

Occasionally a battery disconnect clears a temporary glitch, but it’s not a fix — if the key chip or reader is failing, the fault returns. On some cars it can also trigger other warnings. A proper diagnosis takes minutes with the right equipment.

Can you fix an immobiliser fault at my home?

Yes. We diagnose and fix immobiliser problems at your location across London, Kent, Essex, Surrey, and Sussex — 24/7. Most jobs end with a new key programmed on the spot, and you pay after completion.

Stuck With a Car That Won’t Start?

Tell us the make, model, and what the dash is showing — we’ll tell you honestly whether it sounds like the key, the immobiliser, or something else, and give you a price before we set off. Call 07777 676261 or message us on WhatsApp. No call-out fee, pay after completion, 2-year warranty on every key.