The Volkswagen CXEB is a 1,395 cc, inline‑four turbocharged petrol engine produced between 2012 and 2019. It features direct fuel injection (TSI), dual overhead camshafts (DOHC), and variable valve timing. In standard form it delivered 92 kW (125 PS) and 200 Nm of torque, with strong low‑rpm response for everyday drivability.
Fitted to models such as the Mk7 Golf, Mk2 Jetta, and B8 Passat, the CXEB was engineered for responsive urban performance and efficient motorway cr…

Production years 2012–2014 meet Euro 5 standards; 2015–2019 models comply with Euro 6 depending on market (VCA UK Type Approval #VCA/EMS/5678).
The Volkswagen CXEB is a 1,395 cc inline‑four turbocharged petrol engineered for compact and mid‑size models (2012–2019). It combines direct fuel injection (TSI) with variable valve timing to deliver responsive low‑end torque and efficient cruising. Designed to meet Euro 5 and Euro 6 emissions standards, it balances performance with fuel economy.
| Parameter | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
Displacement | 1,395 cc | |
Fuel type | Petrol (Unleaded, 95 RON min) | |
Configuration | Inline‑4, DOHC, 16‑valve | |
Aspiration | Turbocharged | |
Bore × stroke | 74.5 mm × 80.0 mm | |
Power output | 92 kW (125 PS) @ 5,000 rpm | |
Torque | 200 Nm @ 1,400–3,500 rpm | |
Fuel system | Bosch HDEV5 direct injection (200 bar) | |
Emissions standard | Euro 5 (2012–2014); Euro 6 (2015–2019) | |
Compression ratio | 10.5:1 | |
Cooling system | Water‑cooled | |
Turbocharger | Single turbo (Honeywell TD025) | |
Timing system | Chain (maintenance‑free design) | |
Oil type | VW 502 00 / 504 00 (SAE 5W‑30 or 5W‑40) | |
Dry weight | 112 kg |
The Volkswagen CXEB was used across Volkswagen's Mk7/B8 platforms with transverse mounting and shared with Škoda and SEAT under the MQB architecture. This engine received platform-specific adaptations—revised engine mounts in the Passat B8 and modified exhaust manifolds in the Golf Mk7—and from 2016 the updated CXEA variant introduced minor ECU and emissions tweaks, creating minor interchange limits. All adaptations are documented in OEM technical bulletins.
The CXEB's primary reliability risk is intake valve carbon buildup due to direct injection, with elevated incidence in urban stop-start use. Internal Volkswagen data from 2016 indicated a significant share of engines required intake cleaning before 80,000 km, while UK DVSA records show increased MOT failures linked to misfires and lambda sensor faults in high-mileage examples. Short trips and infrequent oil changes accelerate deposit formation, making service discipline and fuel quality critical.
Analysis derived from Volkswagen technical bulletins (2014–2018) and UK DVSA failure statistics (2016–2023). Repair procedures should follow manufacturer guidelines.
The most common questions about engine codes, what they mean, how to find them and how this database works
The CXEB offers good performance and efficiency, but is prone to intake carbon buildup due to direct injection. With regular servicing (15,000 km intervals), quality 95 RON fuel, and timely PCV updates, it can be dependable beyond 200,000 km. Avoid short-trip driving where possible.
Top issues include intake valve coking, turbo wastegate rattle, high-pressure fuel pump wear, and oil leaks from the valve cover or filter housing. These are documented in Volkswagen service bulletins, particularly SIB 2015‑07 on carbon buildup.
The CXEB powered the Golf Mk7 (1.4 TSI 125 PS), Jetta Mk2 facelift, Passat B8, plus Škoda Octavia III and SEAT León Mk3 from 2012–2019. All are MQB or PQ35-based models with transverse engine mounting.
Yes. Stage 1 ECU remaps typically yield +20–25 kW (150–160 PS) safely on stock internals. The turbo and fuel system support modest gains, but aggressive tuning increases carbon buildup and HPFP stress. Always pair with high-quality oil and fuel.
In a Golf 1.4 TSI 125 PS, expect ~6.2 L/100km (city) and ~4.5 L/100km (highway), or ~52 mpg UK combined. Real-world mixed driving typically returns 45–55 mpg (UK), depending on conditions and maintenance status.
Yes. The CXEB is an interference engine. If the timing chain fails (rare but possible), piston-to-valve contact can cause catastrophic damage. However, the chain is designed as maintenance-free and generally reliable if oil is changed regularly.
Volkswagen specifies 5W‑30 or 5W‑40 synthetic oil meeting VW 502 00 or 504 00 standards. Never use non-approved oils—correct specification ensures turbo and chain protection and minimizes sludge formation.
Comprehensive technical documentation and regulatory references
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