Oil Manual

Is thicker oil better?

Learn · Myths

Thicker oil is not automatically better — engines are engineered for a specific viscosity, and using a heavier grade than specified can reduce fuel economy, slow cold-start flow, and sometimes lower protection. The right oil is the grade your owner's manual lists, not the thickest one on the shelf.

Where the myth comes from

The idea that thicker oil is better is easy to believe. Thicker oil clings to surfaces and feels more protective, and a heavier grade can quiet a noisy older engine for a while. But engine design has moved on. Modern engines use tight internal clearances and precise oil passages, and they are built and tested around one specific viscosity grade.

When you pour in oil that is thicker than designed, it does not flow as quickly at startup, a moment when fast oil delivery matters. It also takes more energy to pump, which can lower fuel economy. Thicker is not the same as better.

What the right grade actually does

The grade in your manual is chosen to balance two jobs: flowing fast enough when the engine is cold, and staying thick enough to protect parts when the engine is hot. Engineers pick a grade that does both for your specific engine and the climates it was designed for.

Using the specified grade helps oil reach moving parts quickly on a cold morning, keeps the oil pump working as intended, and supports the fuel-economy numbers the engine was tuned for. A heavier grade can upset that balance, even if it seems safer.

When a different grade is okay

Sometimes a manual lists more than one acceptable grade, often tied to temperature or driving conditions. Some manuals also note that a slightly heavier grade is acceptable for a high-mileage engine that burns oil. In those cases, choosing within the listed options is fine.

What is not a good idea is guessing on your own. If you think your engine needs a different grade, check the manual first, and treat its guidance as the final word. Remember to keep two ideas separate: viscosity is the grade, like 5W-30, while the specification, like an API or ILSAC standard, describes the oil’s performance level. Both should match what the manual calls for.

Frequently asked questions

Does thicker oil protect an old engine better?

Sometimes a slightly heavier grade can reduce oil consumption in a worn engine, but only if the manual lists it as acceptable. Jumping grades on your own can do more harm than good.

Why do some people add thicker oil?

Usually to quiet a noisy or leaky older engine. It can mask symptoms but does not fix the cause, and it can slow cold-start flow.

Can I switch to a thicker grade in summer?

Only if your manual lists that grade as acceptable for your climate. Modern multigrade oils already handle a wide temperature range, so changing on your own is usually unnecessary.