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Parts for your 2017 Toyota C-hr-Oxygen sensor

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Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS102

Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS102

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$958
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX433

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX433

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$511
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX407

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX407

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$402
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Tridon Oxygen Sensor - TOS061

Tridon Oxygen Sensor - TOS061

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$359
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA722-EE24
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA722-EE24

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$276
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX763

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX763

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$274
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - 2 Wire - OX239

Goss Oxygen Sensor - 2 Wire - OX239

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$282
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX398

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX398

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$313
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA659-EE17
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA659-EE17

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$205
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Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS108

Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS108

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$228
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA669-EE14
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA669-EE14

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$202
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OEX  Oxygen Sensor - OOS5156
OEX

OEX Oxygen Sensor - OOS5156

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$386
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA571-C7
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA571-C7

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$319
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Goss oxygen sensor subaru - OX924

Goss oxygen sensor subaru - OX924

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$495
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS1338

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS1338

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$769
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS1018

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS1018

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$600
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS861

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS861

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$308
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS1139

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS1139

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$422
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS831

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS831

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$308
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS837

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS837

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$278
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS1043

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS1043

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$308
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS1335

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS1335

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$404
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS893

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS893

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$254
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS1100

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS1100

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$220
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS870

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS870

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$252
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Fuelmiser  Oxygen Sensor  - COS852

Fuelmiser Oxygen Sensor - COS852

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$220
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Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS105

Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS105

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$971
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX424

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX424

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$707
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX773

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX773

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$704
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Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS127

Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS127

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$458
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX477

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX477

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$648
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX804

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX804

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$679
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX761

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX761

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$475
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Showing 118 - 156 of 686 products

2017 Toyota C‑HR oxygen sensor: what it does and when to replace it

Technical sources confirm the 2017 Toyota C‑HR does use oxygen-sensing hardware. Toyota’s Repair Manual (SFI/Engine Control sections) and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalog list an upstream air–fuel ratio sensor (wideband) and a downstream oxygen sensor (narrowband) for common 2017 C‑HR engines used in AU/NZ and other markets (e.g., 8NR‑FTS, 3ZR‑FAE, 2ZR‑FXE). DENSO’s application catalogue also lists matching part numbers. These sensors are integral to OBD‑II and ADR/Euro emissions compliance, so they’re absolutely relevant on a 2017 C‑HR.

On a 2017 Toyota C‑HR, the oxygen sensor setup is a two‑piece team: the upstream air–fuel ratio (A/F) sensor sits in the exhaust manifold to help the ECU trim fuel precisely, and the downstream O2 sensor monitors catalytic converter efficiency. Together they keep the small turbo or hybrid/petrol engine running clean, smooth and as frugal as it should be on Aussie and Kiwi roads.

When these sensors age or get contaminated, fuelling can go rich or lean, economy drops, and emissions climb. The dash may throw a check engine light with codes like P0138/P0139/P0420. While Toyota doesn’t set a strict replacement interval, many workshops in AU/NZ suggest considering replacement around 160,000–200,000 km, or earlier if symptoms show. Genuine or reputable OEM‑equivalent sensors are the go, they usually arrive with the right thread coating, so there’s no need to slather extra anti‑seize on the threads.

  • Common signs the C‑HR’s O2/A/F sensor needs attention:
    • Noticeable jump in L/100 km without another cause
    • Rough idle, hesitant throttle, or flat spots
    • Exhaust smell or failed WOF/rego emissions test
    • Check engine light with O2/A/F or catalyst codes

Good servicing habits help sensors live longer. Fix exhaust leaks upstream of the cat, keep up with correct‑spec engine oil to prevent contamination, and sort any misfire quickly so raw fuel doesn’t cook the cat and sensors. If a sensor does need swapping, use the proper oxygen sensor socket on a cool exhaust, route the harness exactly like factory, and clip it away from heat. After installation, clear codes and let the ECU complete its trims with a decent mixed drive cycle.

Keeping these sensors healthy means the 2017 C‑HR stays punchy around town, relaxed on the motorway, and easy on fuel—while doing the right thing for emissions.

  • FAQ: How many oxygen sensors does a 2017 Toyota C‑HR have?

    Most 2017 C‑HR variants run two: a wideband air–fuel ratio sensor before the catalytic converter (Bank 1 Sensor 1) and a traditional oxygen sensor after the converter (Bank 1 Sensor 2). That covers fuelling control and catalyst monitoring.

    Exact part numbers vary by engine, but the two‑sensor layout is the standard arrangement across AU/NZ models.

  • FAQ: When should the oxygen sensor be replaced on a 2017 C‑HR?

    There’s no hard interval from Toyota. Many techs recommend inspection from about 160,000 km, and replacement if fuel economy drops, drivability suffers, or fault codes appear.

    If the vehicle sees lots of short trips or oil consumption, sensors can age faster, so earlier checks make sense.

  • FAQ: Can you drive with a faulty oxygen sensor on a 2017 C‑HR?

    It’ll usually still run, but it may default to richer fuelling, hurting economy and the catalytic converter. Prolonged driving risks bigger repair bills.

    Best bet is to scan it, confirm the fault, and sort the sensor promptly to keep the C‑HR happy and compliant.

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