Mobile auto repair across the GTA. Tell me what's going on and I'll text you back within the hour with a real quote.
Prefer to talk? Call or text 647-450-0406 — answered 24/7.
Takes 30 seconds. I'll text you back with pricing.
The quick answer: A car that jerks, bucks or hesitates when you accelerate is usually one of a few things: an engine misfire from worn spark plugs or failing ignition coils, a fuel-delivery issue (clogged injector, weak fuel pump, dirty filter), a sensor feeding the computer bad data (like a mass-airflow or throttle-position sensor), or — if the jerk feels like a hard or slipping gear change — a transmission problem. A flashing check engine light while it's jerking means an active misfire, which you should not keep driving on because it can damage the catalytic converter. Get the codes read; they narrow this down fast. Cars With Fares comes to you across the GTA — call or text 647-450-0406.
A car that jerks or bucks when you give it gas is unsettling, and it covers a fairly wide range of causes — from a $200 set of spark plugs to a transmission issue. The good news is that modern cars almost always log a fault code when this happens, so the diagnosis isn't a guessing game once someone reads the computer.
I'm a mobile mechanic across the GTA, and 'it jerks when I accelerate' is a common diagnostic call. Here's how the feel of the jerk and what your dashboard is doing narrow down the cause, what's most likely, how urgent it is, and what the fix typically costs at a GTA shop.
People describe this a few different ways. If any of these match what you're noticing, you're in the right place:
From most to least common, here's what usually causes this — in plain English, with the actual parts named:
The most common cause. Worn plugs or a failing coil pack cause a cylinder to misfire, especially under the load of acceleration, producing a buck or stutter. It usually sets a misfire code (P0300 series) and often a flashing check engine light while it's happening. Plugs and coils are a straightforward, common fix.
A clogged or leaking fuel injector, a weakening fuel pump, or a dirty fuel filter starves the engine of fuel under acceleration, causing hesitation and jerking. It often feels worse the harder you accelerate. Fuel-system cleaning or component replacement sorts it depending on the cause.
The engine computer relies on sensors to meter fuel and air. A dirty or failing mass-airflow (MAF) sensor, throttle-position sensor, or oxygen sensor can make the engine hesitate or jerk because it's getting wrong information. These usually set a specific code that points right at the part.
If the jerk feels like a hard, delayed or slipping gear change rather than an engine stutter, the transmission is the suspect — low or old fluid, a failing solenoid, or wear. CVT-equipped cars (common on many Nissans and Hondas) have their own shudder/jerk patterns. This branch is more involved, which is why telling an engine buck from a shift jerk matters.
An unmetered air (vacuum) leak or a carbon-clogged throttle body upsets the air-fuel mix and can cause hesitation and rough acceleration, often with a rough idle too. Both are common and relatively contained fixes.
Light hesitation with no warning light can usually be driven gently while you get it diagnosed. But a flashing check engine light while the car jerks means an active misfire dumping raw fuel into the exhaust — keep driving on that and you can overheat and ruin the catalytic converter, which is an expensive part. If the light is flashing, or the car is lurching badly, lurching into limp mode, or you suspect the transmission, get it looked at before driving further.
These are honest GTA shop/dealer ranges so you have a feel for the number — they are not our price. We give a flat quote for your specific car once the actual cause is confirmed, so you're not paying for a guess:
| Likely fix | What's involved | Typical GTA shop/dealer cost |
|---|---|---|
| Spark plugs + ignition coil(s) | Replace plugs and failed coil | $200 – $600 |
| Fuel injector / cleaning | Clean or replace injector | $200 – $700 |
| MAF / sensor replacement | Replace the faulty sensor | $200 – $500 |
| Throttle body clean / vacuum leak | Clean or reseal | $150 – $450 |
| Transmission service / repair | Fluid, solenoid or more | $250 – $3,000+ |
This is where mobile service shines. There's no reason to risk driving a car with this symptom to a shop and wait around. Right where your car is parked — your driveway, your workplace lot, anywhere in the GTA — I confirm the actual cause (not a guess), fix the vast majority of these on-site, and tell you straight if it's one of the rare jobs that genuinely needs a shop. We handle this through mobile engine diagnosis & repair across Mississauga, Toronto, Oakville, Brampton and the surrounding GTA.
The most common cause is an engine misfire from worn spark plugs or a failing ignition coil, which makes a cylinder stutter under the load of acceleration. Other causes are a fuel-delivery problem (clogged injector, weak fuel pump, dirty filter), a sensor feeding the computer bad data (mass-airflow or throttle-position sensor), a vacuum leak, or — if the jerk happens at a gear change — a transmission issue. Reading the fault codes narrows it down quickly.
Light hesitation with no warning light can be driven gently while you get it diagnosed. But if the check engine light is flashing while it jerks, that's an active misfire dumping raw fuel into the exhaust — continuing to drive can overheat and destroy the catalytic converter, an expensive part. A flashing light, bad lurching, or a transmission that's slipping all mean stop and get it checked before driving further.
Most cases trace to ignition or fuel and are affordable at a GTA shop — spark plugs and a coil, a fuel injector, or a sensor each run a few hundred dollars. It only gets expensive if the cause is the transmission, which ranges from a fluid service to a major repair. That's why reading the codes and confirming whether it's an engine misfire or a shift problem comes first. The exact figure is a flat quote once the cause is confirmed.
A flashing check engine light means an active, severe misfire is happening right now — a cylinder isn't firing properly and raw fuel is going into the exhaust. That's the one warning you shouldn't drive on, because the unburned fuel overheats and can destroy the catalytic converter, turning a spark-plug job into a much bigger bill. Pull over, and get the misfire diagnosed before driving further.
Yes. We scan the fault codes right in your driveway, which usually points straight at the failing system — ignition, fuel, a sensor, or the transmission. From there we confirm and fix most causes on-site across the GTA: plugs and coils, injectors, sensors, throttle-body cleaning. If it turns out to be a transmission issue we'll tell you straight what's involved. You get a flat quote once the cause is confirmed.
Describe it to the AI mechanic for an instant read, or send me the details and I'll tell you what we're likely looking at — then I come to you, confirm the real cause, and give you an honest flat quote. mobile engine diagnosis & repair across the GTA.
Call 647-450-0406