What This FMI Means
FMI 15 indicates the monitored parameter is above a moderate threshold. SAE J1939 defines multiple threshold FMIs (FMI 0, 1, and 15–18) to allow modules to communicate graduated severity levels for the same parameter. Using multiple FMIs on the same SPN, the module can report an early warning before a more critical condition.
A moderate high reading — FMI 15 — may represent a mild coolant temperature warning before an overprotection shutdown. The severity and required response depend on the OEM's calibration of that specific SPN. Unlike circuit FMIs (3, 4) or response FMIs (7), this is a valid-data threshold fault: the signal is electrically correct and the measured value is real.
How It Appears With SPN Codes
FMI 15 appears on fluid level, temperature, and pressure SPNs where multi-tier threshold monitoring is implemented. DEF level (SPN 1761), coolant level, battery state-of-charge, fuel level, and engine oil level are common examples where an early high-threshold warning (FMI 15) precedes a critical threshold condition (FMI 0 or another FMI in this range) as conditions deteriorate.
Seeing a progression from FMI 15 to a more severe threshold FMI on the same SPN in the fault code history tells the technician and driver that the underlying condition has been worsening over time rather than being a sudden failure or isolated sensor spike.
How to Approach Diagnosis
Verify the physical condition of the parameter being monitored. For FMI 15 on a fluid level SPN, check the actual fluid level. For a temperature SPN, measure the actual temperature independently if possible. A physical parameter genuinely out of range is the most common cause of threshold FMIs.
If the physical parameter is within the normal range but FMI 15 persists, suspect sensor calibration drift or a sensor installed in the wrong location. Comparing the sensor's reading to a secondary measurement source (a manual dipstick, a secondary temperature probe, or an analog gauge) helps distinguish a real exceedance from a sensor reading error.
What Drivers Should Record
Note the specific SPN to understand which parameter is high, and whether any related operational events occurred — a fluid low indicator on the dash, unusual engine temperature behavior, or scheduled maintenance that was delayed.
Record whether the code is active or inactive, all other codes present at the same time, and how the vehicle has been operated recently. A threshold FMI appearing after extended idling, high-load operation, or missed fluid maintenance has a clear probable cause that helps prioritize and plan the repair.
Related Pages
Related Fault Code Pages
Sources
- SAE J1939 Standards Collection SAE International · official · accessed 2026-05-05 · confidence medium
Source: SAE International, SAE J1939 Standards Collection. This page paraphrases factual fields only and is not a substitute for the original document.
Open source - NHTSA Manufacturer Communications Search National Highway Traffic Safety Administration · government · accessed 2026-05-05 · confidence high
Source: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, NHTSA Manufacturer Communications Search. This page paraphrases factual fields only and is not a substitute for the original document.
Open source
FAQ
How is FMI 15 different from FMI 0 or FMI 1 for the same SPN?
FMI 0 and FMI 1 indicate the measured value is outside the module's normal operating range. FMI 15 is more specific — it indicates the value is above a calibrated threshold that represents a highest severity threshold. OEMs define these threshold levels in their calibration to provide graduated severity warnings before protection actions occur. The same parameter can produce FMI 0/1 at one limit and FMI 15 at a separately calibrated operational threshold.
If FMI 15 appears alongside FMI 16 on the same SPN, does that mean two separate faults are happening?
The threshold FMIs (15-18) often escalate from one level to another as a condition worsens or improves — so seeing both in fault history typically means the parameter has been at different levels at different times, not that two independent faults occurred simultaneously. The timestamps in the fault history tell you the sequence.
Can FMI 15 lead to a derate, or is it always just a warning?
Whether FMI 15 triggers a derate depends on the SPN and OEM calibration. Threshold FMIs on aftertreatment SPNs (such as SPN 4364 FMI 18 for SCR efficiency, or SPN 3364 FMI 1 for DEF quality) are part of the inducement escalation sequence and can lead to derates if unresolved. On other SPNs, FMI 15 may be an early warning that generates a lamp without an immediate derate.