Nissan Rogue Dashboard Warning Lights: What Each Symbol Means
By the CarsDailyHub Editorial Team | Automotive writers; every article fact-checked against Nissan’s owner’s manual and OEM service documentation | Updated June 2026
Quick Answer: The three lights that mean stop driving immediately on a Nissan Rogue are the red engine malfunction light, the red oil pressure light, and the red brake light. Amber lights (check engine, ABS, TPMS, AWD) mean drive carefully and get it diagnosed soon. Green and blue lights are informational, like cruise control and turn signals, and need no action.
This guide covers dashboard warning symbols for the 2014-2024 Nissan Rogue (second and third generations). Specifications reference Nissan’s owner’s manual and OEM service documentation. Last reviewed: June 2026.
Table of Contents
- How Nissan Rogue Dashboard Lights Work (Color Logic)
- Complete Nissan Rogue Warning Light Table
- Red Warning Lights, Stop Driving Immediately
- Amber/Yellow Warning Lights, Diagnose Soon
- Green & Blue Indicator Lights (Informational)
- Nissan Rogue-Specific Lights You Should Know
- What to Do When a Light Comes On (Decision Flow)
- How Much It Costs to Diagnose Dashboard Lights
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Sources & References
How Nissan Rogue Dashboard Lights Work (Color Logic)
Nissan uses a three-tier color system across the Rogue lineup. Once you understand the logic, you can read any light without memorizing each symbol:
- Red = danger. Something is actively failing or about to cause damage. Pull over safely and stop the engine.
- Amber/Yellow = caution. A system needs attention but the vehicle is still drivable. Schedule diagnosis within a few days, do not ignore it for weeks.
- Green/Blue = informational. A feature is switched on (cruise, headlights, turn signals). No action needed.
One nuance specific to the Rogue: a flashing amber light is more urgent than a steady one. A flashing check engine light means an active engine misfire that can damage the catalytic converter in minutes. That is a pull-over-now situation even though the color is amber.
The Rogue also has AWD-specific warnings that FWD-only models do not have. The AWD high-temperature warning is unique to Rogue models equipped with all-wheel drive and indicates the rear coupling is overheating.
Mechanics typically see Rogue owners ignore the amber malfunction indicator light for weeks because “the car still drives fine.” The Rogue’s CVT, in particular, can develop issues that start as an amber warning and progress to a $4,000 transmission replacement if left unchecked. Amber means soon, not never.
Complete Nissan Rogue Warning Light Table
| Symbol | Name | Color | Severity | What It Means | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Engine icon | Engine Malfunction (MIL) | Red/Amber | 🔴/🟡 | Engine or emissions system fault | Red: stop. Amber: diagnose soon |
| Oil can | Engine Oil Pressure | Red | 🔴 Stop now | Low oil pressure, engine damage imminent | Stop, check oil, do not restart if low |
| (!) in circle | Brake System | Red | 🔴 Stop now | Parking brake on, low brake fluid, or brake fault | Release parking brake; if still on, check fluid, tow if needed |
| Battery | Charging System | Red | 🔴 Stop now | Alternator or belt failure, battery draining | Turn off all electrics, drive to nearest shop |
| ABS in circle | Anti-Lock Brakes | Amber | 🟡 Diagnose soon | ABS disabled, base brakes still work | Safe to drive carefully; schedule diagnosis |
| Tire with ! | Tire Pressure (TPMS) | Amber | 🟡 Check soon | One or more tires low on air | Check all tire pressures at next stop |
| Airbag icon | Airbag/Supplemental Restraint | Amber | 🟡 Diagnose soon | Airbag system fault, may not deploy in crash | Do not ignore; schedule dealer diagnosis |
| AWD icon | AWD High Temperature | Amber | 🟡 Stop & cool | AWD coupling overheating (AWD models only) | Stop, let cool 15-20 min; if persists, diagnose |
| Fuel pump | Low Fuel | Amber | 🟡 Refuel soon | Less than ~50 miles of range | Refuel within 50 miles |
| Door ajar | Door Open | Red | 🔴 Stop & check | A door is not fully latched | Stop, close all doors |
| Seatbelt | Seatbelt Reminder | Red | 🔴 Buckle up | Driver or passenger unbuckled | Fasten seatbelt |
| Speedometer | Cruise Control | Green | ℹ️ Info | Cruise is active | Normal, no action |
| Headlight icon | High Beams | Blue | ℹ️ Info | High beams on | Dim for oncoming traffic |
| Arrow | Turn Signal | Green | ℹ️ Info | Signal active | Normal |
| Key icon | Key System Warning | Amber | 🟡 Diagnose soon | Key not detected or immobilizer fault | Check key battery; try spare key |
| Steering wheel | Power Steering (EPS) | Red/Amber | 🔴/🟡 | EPS system fault | Red: tow. Amber: drive carefully to shop |
| Thermometer | Engine Coolant Temp | Red | 🔴 Stop now | Engine overheating | Pull over, stop engine, let cool 20+ min |
| (!) triangle | Master Warning | Red | 🔴 Stop now | Multiple system faults detected | Stop, check other lights, diagnose |
| Shift to Park | Shift to Park | Red | 🔴 Stop & park | Vehicle not in park | Shift to P before exiting |

Red Warning Lights, Stop Driving Immediately
Engine Malfunction Light (Red)
When the engine malfunction light illuminates red on your Rogue, the engine management system has detected a serious fault. The vehicle may enter limp mode, restricting power and speed to protect itself.
What to do:
1. Pull over to a safe location and assess the situation.
2. Note whether the light is steady or flashing. A flashing light means an active misfire, which can damage the catalytic converter.
3. If steady red, call for diagnosis. If flashing red, do not drive further.
4. Have the codes read with an OBD2 scanner to identify the specific fault.
Engine Oil Pressure
The red oil can means oil pressure has dropped below the safe threshold. This is not a “low oil level” reminder. It means your engine is about to destroy itself.
What to do:
1. Pull over and stop the engine immediately.
2. Wait 5 minutes for oil to drain into the pan, then check the dipstick.
3. If oil is below the MIN mark, add the correct viscosity. Most Rogue models use 0W-20 full synthetic. Check the oil filler cap or manual for your specific year.
4. If the dipstick reads normal but the light stays on, do not restart. Low pressure with a full sump means a failing oil pump or blocked pickup. Driving will spin a bearing in minutes.
5. Tow to a shop.
Brake System
The red (!) circle on the Rogue means one of three things: the parking brake is engaged, brake fluid is low, or there is a brake-system fault.
What to do:
1. Confirm the parking brake is fully released. On Rogue models with electronic parking brake, press the switch down firmly.
2. If the light stays on, check the brake fluid reservoir under the hood.
3. If fluid is at the MIN line or below, top up with DOT 4 brake fluid (verify spec in your manual).
4. A sudden large fluid drop means a leak in the system. The brake pedal may feel soft. Do not drive. Tow it.
5. If fluid is normal and the pedal feels firm, the brake switch or sensor may be faulty. Drive carefully to a shop.
Charging System / Battery
The red battery icon means the alternator has stopped charging. The vehicle is now running on battery alone and will stall once the battery drains, typically within 5 to 30 minutes depending on electrical load.
What to do:
1. Turn off everything non-essential: climate control, heated seats, radio, phone chargers.
2. Drive directly to the nearest repair shop. Do not make stops.
3. Common causes on the Rogue: worn serpentine belt, failed alternator, corroded battery terminals. A belt snap is the most common and is often audible.
Engine Coolant Temperature
When this red thermometer illuminates, your engine is above its safe operating temperature, typically above 118°C (244°F). Continuing to drive even a few miles can warp the cylinder head and blow the head gasket.
What to do:
1. Pull over to a safe location and shut the engine off.
2. Do not open the radiator cap while hot. Wait at least 20-30 minutes.
3. Once cool, check the coolant reservoir level. If low, top up with the correct Nissan-specified coolant (Nissan Long Life Coolant or equivalent).
4. Look underneath for leaks. A puddle of blue, green, or pink fluid means a coolant leak.
5. If the light returns after topping up, do not drive. Call a tow. The water pump or thermostat may have failed.
Amber/Yellow Warning Lights, Diagnose Soon
Engine Malfunction Light (Amber)
The amber engine icon is the most common and most misunderstood light. It can mean something as trivial as a loose fuel cap or as serious as a failing catalytic converter.
First step, always: Tighten the fuel cap until it clicks at least once. A loose cap is the single most common cause of a Rogue check engine light, and it takes 10 seconds to rule out. Drive for a day. If the light clears, you are done.
If it stays on, you need the diagnostic trouble codes (DTCs) read. Any auto parts store will read them for free, or a $25-40 OBD2 scanner pays for itself on the second use. The code tells you the system at fault. Never replace parts guessing.
A flashing amber check engine light is different and urgent. It means an active engine misfire. Unburned fuel is entering the exhaust and can overheat the catalytic converter, melting its internal honeycomb. Reduce speed immediately, minimize load, and get to a shop the same day.
ABS Warning Light
When the amber ABS light illuminates on the Rogue, the anti-lock braking system is disabled. Your base brakes still work. You can stop normally. What you lose is the anti-lock function in a panic stop, so wheels may lock up under hard braking.
Most ABS faults on the Rogue trace to wheel-speed sensors or their wiring, both of which sit exposed near the wheels and corrode over time. Diagnosis is straightforward with a scanner. Safe to drive carefully to a shop.
AWD High Temperature Warning (AWD Models Only)
The amber AWD warning on AWD-equipped Rogue models indicates the all-wheel drive coupling is overheating. This typically happens during prolonged driving in deep snow, mud, or when towing at capacity.
What to do:
1. Stop the vehicle in a safe location and let the AWD system cool for 15-20 minutes.
2. If the light persists after cooling, the AWD coupling or its fluid may be degraded. The vehicle is still drivable in FWD mode, but AWD function is disabled.
3. Common causes include degraded AWD coupling fluid (requires fluid change, not full replacement) or a faulty rear differential temperature sensor.
Tire Pressure (TPMS)
The horseshoe-with-exclamation icon means one or more tires has dropped below the pressure threshold, typically 25-30% below the placard pressure on the driver’s door jamb. For the Rogue, this is usually around 33-36 psi cold depending on trim and tire size.
Check all four tires with a gauge at the next safe stop. The TPMS does not tell you which tire, and a slow leak can become a flat. If pressures look fine but the light persists, the system may need a TPMS reset. On most Rogue models, this is done via the dashboard menu or by driving above 25 mph for a few minutes after inflating.
Key System Warning
The amber key icon means the Rogue’s immobilizer system cannot detect the key, or the key battery is low. You may still be able to start the engine by holding the key fob against the start button, but this is a temporary workaround.
What to do:
1. Replace the key fob battery (CR2032, available at any pharmacy or hardware store for $3-5).
2. If the light persists with a new battery, try your spare key.
3. If both keys trigger the warning, the vehicle’s immobilizer antenna may be faulty. This requires dealer diagnosis.
Green & Blue Indicator Lights (Informational)
These lights confirm a feature is active. They are not warnings:
- Green cruise control icon – cruise is engaged and holding speed.
- Blue headlight icon – high beams are on. Switch to low for oncoming traffic.
- Green flashing arrows – turn signal active.
- Green car between lane lines – Lane Departure Warning is active and monitoring lane position. If it flashes amber, the system detects an unintended lane departure.
- Green key icon – The key has been recognized and the engine can be started.
- Green AWD icon – AWD is actively engaged and distributing power to the rear wheels (AWD models only).
If any of these stay illuminated when the feature is off, a switch or sensor may be stuck. Worth mentioning at your next service, but not urgent.

Nissan Rogue-Specific Lights You Should Know
A few symbols are either unique to the Rogue or behave differently than on other Nissans:
AWD High Temperature Warning – On AWD-equipped Rogue models, the AWD high-temperature warning is unique. It indicates the rear coupling is overheating, typically from prolonged use in challenging conditions. Stop and let it cool. If the warning appears frequently during normal driving, the AWD coupling fluid may need replacement ($150-250).
Shift to Park Warning – The Rogue displays a “Shift to Park” warning if you open the driver’s door without the transmission in Park. This is a safety feature, not a fault. If the warning appears even when the shifter is in Park, the shift position sensor may be faulty. This is a known issue on 2018-2020 Rogue models.
No Key Detected – The “No Key Detected” warning appears when the intelligent key system cannot communicate with the key fob. This is usually a dead key fob battery (CR2032, $3-5). If replacing the battery does not fix it, the key fob itself may need reprogramming at a dealer ($50-100).
Power Will Turn Off to Save Battery – This message appears when the Rogue’s battery voltage is low and the system is shutting down non-essential electronics to preserve starting power. If you see this frequently, the 12V battery may be failing. Most Rogue batteries last 4-6 years.
Headlight System Error – On Rogue models with LED headlights, a “Headlight System Error” warning may appear if an LED headlight module is failing. LED headlights are typically covered under Nissan’s 3-year/36,000-mile warranty. If your Rogue is out of warranty, LED headlight replacement costs $200-400 per unit.
What to Do When a Light Comes On (Decision Flow)
Use this sequence every time a new light appears:
- Is it red? Pull over safely within the next minute. Stop the engine. Check fluid levels once cool. Do not drive if a red light returns after topping up.
- Is it amber and flashing? Reduce speed and load immediately. Drive to the nearest shop, not home, not work, the shop. A flashing amber is treated like a red.
- Is it amber and steady? Note the symbol. Tighten the fuel cap if it is the check engine light. Schedule diagnosis within the week. The vehicle is drivable but the issue will not self-resolve.
- Is it green or blue? No action. It is informational. Confirm the feature is one you intended to switch on.
- Is it the AWD warning on an AWD model? If you have been driving in challenging conditions, stop and let the AWD system cool for 15-20 minutes. If the light persists, schedule diagnosis.
The one mistake mechanics see most often: ignoring the amber check engine light because “the car still drives fine.” The Rogue’s CVT, in particular, can develop issues that start as an amber warning and progress to a $4,000 transmission replacement if left unchecked. The amber light is your cheap early warning. Use it.

How Much It Costs to Diagnose Dashboard Lights
| Service | DIY Cost | Shop Cost (US avg) | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| OBD2 code scan | $25-40 (scanner) | Free at auto parts stores; $80-150 at shop | 5-15 min |
| Fuel cap replacement | $12-25 | $25-60 parts + labor | 2 min |
| Wheel speed sensor replacement | $25-60 (part) | $120-220 parts + labor | 30-45 min |
| Key fob battery | $3-5 (battery) | $15-30 | 2 min |
| AWD coupling fluid change | $40-60 (fluid) | $150-250 parts + labor | 45-60 min |
| Coolant leak diagnosis | – | $80-150 diag | 30-60 min |
| Oil pressure diagnosis | – | $80-150 diag | 30-90 min |
| Brake fluid top-up | $6 (fluid) | $20-40 | 5 min |
| 12V battery replacement | $150-200 (part) | $200-350 parts + labor | 30 min |
| LED headlight module | $200-400 (part) | $300-600 parts + labor | 30-60 min |
Cost ranges are US averages compiled from RepairPal and owner-reported data. Actual costs vary by region, model year, and shop type.
When to call a mechanic instead of DIY:
– Any red light that returns after you have topped up the relevant fluid
– A flashing check engine light (active misfire)
– Any brake-system fault you cannot trace to the parking brake
– Anything involving the airbag or supplemental restraint system, never DIY airbag work
– AWD coupling issues, as the rear differential involves precise torque specs
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why did my Nissan Rogue check engine light come on after getting fuel?
A: The most common cause is a loose or faulty fuel cap. The evaporative emissions system monitors for vapor leaks, and a cap that is not clicked tight triggers a P0455 or P0441 code. Tighten the cap until it clicks, drive for a day, and the light usually clears. If it does not, have the codes read. The purge valve or charcoal canister may be the actual culprit.
Q: What does the AWD high temperature warning mean on my Rogue?
A: The AWD high-temperature warning indicates the all-wheel drive coupling is overheating, typically from prolonged driving in deep snow, mud, or when towing at capacity. Stop the vehicle and let the AWD system cool for 15-20 minutes. If the warning appears frequently during normal driving, the AWD coupling fluid may need replacement ($150-250). The vehicle is still drivable in FWD mode.
Q: Can I keep driving with the amber malfunction light on?
A: You can, but with caution. The vehicle is drivable, but the underlying issue will not fix itself. If the light is flashing, that means an active misfire and you should reduce speed and get to a shop immediately. A steady amber light means schedule diagnosis within the week. The longer you drive with it, the more likely a minor issue becomes a major repair.
Q: The ABS light is on but my brakes feel fine, is that safe?
A: Your base brakes still work normally, so stopping distance is unaffected in normal driving. What you lose is anti-lock protection in a panic stop. Wheels may lock and the vehicle can skid. It is safe to drive carefully to a shop, but get it diagnosed. The most common cause on the Rogue is a corroded wheel-speed sensor, a $120-220 repair.
Q: What does the red oil light mean versus the amber maintenance reminder?
A: They are completely different. The red oil can means low oil pressure. Stop the engine immediately or risk catastrophic damage. The amber maintenance reminder or oil-life indicator is a scheduled-service reminder based on mileage and time. It means an oil change is due, not that pressure is low. Never confuse the two. The red one is an emergency, the amber one is a calendar reminder.
Q: My Rogue says “No Key Detected,” what should I do?
A: The key fob battery is likely dead. Replace it with a CR2032 coin battery, available at any pharmacy for $3-5. You can still start the engine temporarily by holding the key fob against the start button. If the warning persists with a new battery, the key fob may need reprogramming at a dealer ($50-100). Try your spare key first to determine whether the issue is the key or the vehicle.
Q: Does the Nissan Rogue have known dashboard warning light issues?
A: The 2018-2020 Rogue has a known issue with the shift position sensor that can trigger a “Shift to Park” warning even when the shifter is in Park. The 2014-2019 Rogue CVT has known failure patterns that can trigger warnings before complete failure. The AWD coupling on 2017-2021 AWD models can overheat in challenging conditions. Check with a Nissan dealer using your VIN to see if any TSBs or extended warranty coverage applies.
Sources & References
- Nissan Motor Corporation – 2014-2024 Nissan Rogue Owner’s Manuals (model-year specific; available at nissanusa.com)
- Nissan Technical Service Bulletins covering shift position sensor and CVT (VIN-specific; available through Nissan dealers)
- NHTSA – Vehicle complaint database for Nissan Rogue by model year (nhtsa.gov)
- RepairPal – Average repair cost estimates for Nissan Rogue by repair type
- OBD-II code definitions – P0455, P0441, C1201 per SAE J2012 standard
Related articles on CarsDailyHub:
– Complete Guide to All Car Dashboard Warning Lights
– Ford Escape Dashboard Warning Lights: What Each Symbol Means
– Nissan Qashqai Dashboard Warning Lights: What Each Symbol Means
– Toyota Dashboard Warning Lights: What Every Symbol Means
– Check Engine Light? Here’s What It Actually Means
