01/13/2026
The fuel gauge potentiometer (level float) is a variable resistor located inside the fuel pump module. Its function is simple: when the fuel level rises or falls, the float arm moves, and this movement shifts a cursor along a resistive track, changing the electrical resistance. The ECU or instrument cluster interprets this change in resistance as the fuel level.
In most vehicles, the module connector has 4 to 6 pins. Two are for the fuel pump (positive and ground or negative), and two are for the potentiometer. In more modern systems, there may be additional pins for fuel temperature sensors or a second float in saddle-type fuel tanks.
The potentiometer does not receive 12V; it typically receives a 5V reference voltage from the instrument cluster or ECU and returns a variable analog signal that depends on the float position, with a stable ground or negative connection.
π§ Direct test from the connector (without removing the module)
With a multimeter set to DC voltage, ignition ON:
Between the reference pin and ground, you should see approximately 5V.
Between the signal pin and ground, the voltage should change smoothly as the fuel level changes, typically between ~0.3V (empty tank) and ~4.5V (full tank).
If the voltage jumps, cuts out, or remains constant, the potentiometer is damaged or the resistive track is worn.
π§ Module test outside the tank (the clearest method)
With a multimeter set to ohms across the two potentiometer pins:
When slowly moving the float from empty to full, the resistance should vary progressively and without jumps.
Typical actual values:
Empty: 180β250 Ξ©
Full: 30β50 Ξ©
Some manufacturers use an inverted scale, but the behavior is always the same: continuous variation.
If you see areas where the resistance is lost, jumps, or becomes infinite, the resistive track is damaged, and the dashboard indicator will do exactly the same.