Capacity is with filter
The number shown is the typical refill amount after replacing the oil filter. If you are only topping off, use the dipstick or level procedure instead of pouring the full service amount.
Oil service
Pick a vehicle to see engine oil capacity with filter, liters, recommended viscosity, and a simple bottle-buying plan.
Vehicle
--Pick a vehicle to see oil capacity.
| Engine | Capacity | Viscosity | Buy |
|---|
The number shown is the typical refill amount after replacing the oil filter. If you are only topping off, use the dipstick or level procedure instead of pouring the full service amount.
A Civic, F-150, or Silverado can have multiple engines, and those engines can use different capacities and oil specs. Match the engine row to your trim, year, and oil cap before buying.
Starter data is compiled from manufacturer owner-manual capacity tables and current owner-manual portals.
Yes. MotorTally shows the refill amount with an oil-filter change, because that is the number most owners need when buying oil for a normal oil service.
Many models use different engines across trims or years. Capacity and viscosity can change between a turbo engine, hybrid engine, diesel engine, or V8, so each engine is listed separately when needed.
No. Add slightly under the listed amount, install the cap, run the engine if applicable, wait for oil to drain back, then check the dipstick or the vehicle's level-check procedure and top off carefully.
No. Model 3 and Model Y are battery-electric vehicles with no internal-combustion engine, no engine-oil sump, and no engine-oil filter. Follow Tesla's maintenance schedule instead.
Oil capacities and viscosity recommendations are reference values for common US-market engines. Always confirm your exact engine, model year, oil cap/manual recommendation, and final oil level before driving.