CarValidator

1.2 PureTech (EB2 turbo / NA)

20192024 · petrol · 1199cc · 100hp

Engine codes: EB2ADT, EB2ADTS, HN05, EB2F

Problematic

Reliability, common problems and owner reviews for the Opel Corsa F 1.2 PureTech (EB2 turbo / NA). Check this before you buy used.

The Corsa F is built on the Stellantis PSA platform, so the petrol is the 1.2 PureTech (EB2 — the same engine as the Peugeot 208/2008, Citroën C3 Aircross and Opel Grandland). The naturally-aspirated 100-PS version is less stressed, but the turbo cars are the ones to be careful with: the wet timing belt (belt-in-oil) degrades and sheds material that can block the oil pickup and destroy the engine — a notorious, expensive failure with extended warranties and rebuilds, plus oil-dilution and tensioner issues. Later production moved to a chain. Buy a wet-belt turbo only with documented early belt replacement and obsessive oil changes; the naturally-aspirated or a chain-era car is safer.

Same engine, other cars

This is the same physical engine (HN05) sold under different names across brands. Reliability is broadly shared — cross-check these:

Known Issues

Wet timing belt failure (EB2 turbo)critical

Belt-in-oil degrades → debris blocks oil pickup → oil starvation → engine destruction. Notorious PureTech fault.

Fix / Workaround: Replace wet belt early; strict oil; prefer NA or chain-era.

Repair cost: €500–€4000

Typically appears after: 60,000 km

Oil dilution / tensionerrecurring

Oil dilution and tensioner wear compound the belt risk.

Fix / Workaround: Frequent oil changes; monitor level; check history.

Repair cost: €200–€1500

Typically appears after: 70,000 km

Year Cutoffs

2022: Before — . After — .

Mileage Thresholds

After 100,000 km: Wet-belt service is critical, not optional.

Pre-Purchase Checklist

  • Wet-belt turbo: documented early belt change essential
  • Same EB2 as 208 / Grandland / C3 Aircross
  • NA 100 or chain-era car is safer

Frequently asked questions

Is the Opel Corsa F 1.2 PureTech (EB2 turbo / NA) reliable?

Problematic — The Corsa F is built on the Stellantis PSA platform, so the petrol is the 1.2 PureTech (EB2 — the same engine as the Peugeot 208/2008, Citroën C3 Aircross and Opel Grandland). The naturally-aspirated 100-PS version is less stressed, but the turbo cars are the ones to be careful with: the wet timing belt (belt-in-oil) degrades and sheds material that can block the oil pickup and destroy the engine — a notorious, expensive failure with extended warranties and rebuilds, plus oil-dilution and tensioner issues. Later production moved to a chain. Buy a wet-belt turbo only with documented early belt replacement and obsessive oil changes; the naturally-aspirated or a chain-era car is safer.

What are the common problems and reviews for the Opel Corsa F 1.2 PureTech (EB2 turbo / NA)?

The most commonly reported problems: Wet timing belt failure (EB2 turbo), Oil dilution / tensioner.

Is a used Opel Corsa F 1.2 PureTech (EB2 turbo / NA) worth buying?

Known design issues and recurring faults that were never fully resolved. Buy only with eyes open.