Blog · June 9, 2026 · 7 min read
When to change your engine oil: real intervals by car.
The 3,000-mile rule is mostly a marketing relic. Here’s what manufacturers, mechanics, and oil chemists actually recommend in 2026 — and how to figure out the right interval for your specific car and driving style.
Where the 3,000-mile rule came from
The 3,000-mile oil change rule was sensible advice in 1975. Conventional oils degraded faster, engines ran richer, and tolerances were looser. Almost none of that is true now. Modern engines run cleaner, oils are formulated better, and oil filters are far more effective. The 3,000-mile rule persists because the businesses selling oil changes have an obvious incentive to keep it alive.
Your car’s manufacturer specifies an interval in the owner’s manual based on engineering — not what a quick-lube chain wants to be true. Start there.
What manufacturers actually recommend
Most automakers in 2026 specify oil change intervals between 5,000 and 10,000 miles for normal service with full synthetic oil. The specifics depend on engine design, oil grade specified, and how the vehicle’s onboard maintenance minder calculates oil life.
Common manufacturer-recommended intervals for full synthetic oil under normal service:
- Toyota / Lexus: 10,000 miles or 12 months for most models with 0W-20 full synthetic.
- Honda / Acura: Maintenance Minder system, typically 7,500–10,000 miles depending on driving.
- Mazda: 7,500 miles or 12 months for full synthetic.
- Subaru: 6,000 miles or 6 months on most current models.
- BMW: Condition-Based Service typically calls for an oil change between 10,000 and 15,000 miles, though many BMW techs recommend 7,500-mile changes for longevity.
- Audi / VW: 10,000 miles or 12 months under variable service intervals.
- Ford / GM / RAM: Oil Life Monitor typically signals between 5,000 and 10,000 miles depending on driving conditions.
- Hyundai / Kia: 7,500 miles or 12 months with synthetic oil.
Always defer to the schedule in your specific owner’s manual. Engine variants matter — a 2.0T direct-injected engine in the same body as a 2.5L naturally aspirated will often have a shorter recommended interval.
Normal service vs. severe service
Manufacturers publish two schedules: normal and severe. Most owners qualify for severe and don’t know it. Severe service typically includes any of:
- Frequent short trips under 10 miles, especially in cold weather.
- Stop-and-go traffic.
- Towing, hauling, or carrying heavy loads.
- Operating in extreme heat or cold.
- Dusty or off-road conditions.
- Extended idling.
If you fit any of those regularly, follow the severe-service schedule in your manual. Severe-service oil intervals are usually about half of normal-service intervals — 5,000 instead of 10,000, or 3,750 instead of 7,500. Your engine isn’t getting time to fully warm up, which means moisture and fuel dilution stay in the oil longer.
Conventional vs. synthetic blend vs. full synthetic
The oil you choose changes the interval. The three common grades, simplified:
- Conventional oil. Cheapest. Breaks down faster, especially under heat. Intervals of 3,000–5,000 miles. Still used in older engines or vehicles where the owner’s manual specifies it.
- Synthetic blend. Mix of conventional and synthetic. Intervals of 5,000–7,500 miles. A middle ground that few enthusiasts recommend — the price gap to full synthetic is small enough that most people skip the blend.
- Full synthetic. Best protection, longest interval. 7,500–10,000+ miles depending on the engine. Required for many modern engines with tight tolerances and turbochargers.
Modern direct-injection and turbocharged engines should run full synthetic. Period. The pressures and temperatures inside those engines are not friendly to conventional oil.
Real intervals by vehicle and use case
A few representative starting points for full synthetic oil. Always verify against your specific owner’s manual.
- Daily commuter, highway-heavy, normal climate: 7,500–10,000 miles.
- City commuter, short trips: 5,000 miles or 6 months, whichever comes first.
- Track or autocross car: Every track day if you’re hard on the engine, or at minimum every 3,000–5,000 miles of mixed use.
- Heavy-duty truck (towing or hauling): Severe-service interval from the manual, usually 5,000 miles.
- Project car or weekend driver, low annual mileage: Once per year minimum, regardless of mileage. Oil sitting in an engine that doesn’t run hot accumulates moisture.
- BMW or Audi with turbo: 7,500 miles is the practical sweet spot. The 15,000-mile manufacturer interval is technically allowed but most enthusiasts and independent shops recommend changing more often.
When time beats mileage
Engine oil degrades in two ways: from use and from age. The use side is mileage. The age side is calendar time — even oil sitting in a parked engine slowly absorbs moisture and oxidizes.
Most manufacturers specify a maximum interval of 6 to 12 months regardless of miles. If you drive less than 5,000 miles a year, you’ll hit the time limit before the mileage limit every cycle. Change the oil based on whichever comes first. This is exactly the case where a maintenance reminder that watches both at once — like the one in Miles — saves you from forgetting.
Frequently asked
Is the 3,000-mile rule still valid?
For modern cars running full synthetic oil, no. The 3,000-mile rule dates from the era of conventional oils and older engines. Most modern engines under normal service can safely run full synthetic to 7,500 or even 10,000 miles. Severe service still benefits from 3,000–5,000-mile intervals.
Should I change my oil based on time or miles?
Whichever comes first. Most manufacturers recommend changing oil every 6 to 12 months even if you haven’t hit the mileage interval. Oil degrades over time, especially in cars driven infrequently or for short trips.
What counts as “severe service”?
Frequent short trips under 10 miles, stop-and-go traffic, towing, extreme heat or cold, dusty conditions, and extended idling. Most owners qualify for severe service. Severe-service intervals are about half of normal-service intervals.
Is full synthetic worth the extra cost?
For most modern engines, yes. Full synthetic resists thermal breakdown, lubricates more consistently at cold start, and lasts roughly twice as long as conventional. The longer interval offsets the higher per-quart cost, and engine protection improves — especially in turbocharged or direct-injection engines.
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