Description
About the Volkswagen Atlas Ignition Coil
The Volkswagen Atlas is VW’s flagship midsize 3-row SUV for the US market, launched in 2017 as a 2018 model year vehicle. The Atlas is built at the Volkswagen Chattanooga Tennessee plant, making it one of the few cars VW produces in the United States specifically for the American market. The Atlas offers two engine options: the 2.0L TSI turbocharged inline-4 (235 hp, standard on base trims) and the 3.6L VR6 narrow-angle V6 (276 hp, available on higher trims). The VR6 engine is unique to Volkswagen, with cylinders arranged at a narrow 15-degree angle that allows a V6 layout in roughly the same physical space as an inline-6.
The ignition coil is a coil-on-plug (COP) design that mounts directly on top of each spark plug. The 2.0T I4 engine uses 4 ignition coils total (one per cylinder) while the 3.6L VR6 uses 6 ignition coils. Each coil contains primary and secondary windings encapsulated in epoxy resin, an integrated igniter circuit, a rubber boot that seals against the spark plug well, and a spring contact that transmits high voltage to the spark plug terminal. When the engine control module signals the coil, it produces up to 40,000 volts of secondary voltage that jumps the spark plug gap and ignites the fuel-air mixture in the cylinder.
Why Atlas Owners Replace Ignition Coils
The most common reasons VW Atlas owners replace ignition coils are: cylinder-specific misfire codes (P0301 for cylinder 1, P0302 for cylinder 2, and so on through P0306 on the VR6), check engine light on with rough running, hesitation under acceleration, reduced fuel economy, engine running on fewer than full cylinders (audible rough idle), or limp mode activation when the PCM detects sustained misfires. A failed coil typically lets the engine run on the remaining good cylinders but with rough operation and risk of catalytic converter damage from unburned fuel.
Atlas owners often replace all ignition coils as a set when one fails, since the others are typically near end of life if the car has more than 80,000 miles. Replacing one coil at a time often leads to chasing repeated failures as the next coil fails a few months later. Our new OEM-specification coils at $29 each (or $109 set of 4 for 2.0T, $159 set of 6 for VR6) make set replacement affordable and practical. The job is straightforward DIY taking 1 to 2 hours total for the full set.
2.0T TSI vs 3.6L VR6 Coils
| 2.0T TSI I4 Coils | 4 coils per engine, one for each of the 4 cylinders. Specific connector and mounting design for 2.0T cylinder head layout. Common on base Atlas trims and Atlas Cross Sport. |
| 3.6L VR6 Coils | 6 coils per engine, one for each of the 6 cylinders. Specific connector and mounting design for VR6 narrow-angle cylinder head layout. The VR6 spaced 15 degrees apart in unique narrow-V configuration. Common on higher trims (SEL, SEL Premium, R-Line with VR6). |
| Cross-Compatibility | 2.0T and VR6 coils are NOT interchangeable due to different connector designs and mounting positions. Always confirm engine variant when ordering. |
Things to Confirm Before Ordering
Year (2018 to current)
Engine (2.0T TSI I4 or 3.6L VR6)
- Quantity needed (individual coil for spot replacement, or set of 4 for 2.0T or 6 for VR6)
Trim (SE, SEL, SEL Premium, R-Line, Atlas Cross Sport)
- Original Volkswagen part number from old coil if available (best fit confirmation)
- Whether other coils have failed previously (set replacement strongly recommended if so)
What Is Included, What Is Not Included
| INCLUDED | The ignition coil assembly with integrated primary and secondary windings, igniter circuit, rubber boot at spark plug interface, internal spring contact, and electrical connector terminal. Sold individually or in sets of 4 or 6 as ordered. |
| NOT INCLUDED | Spark plugs (replace spark plugs at the same time, recommended every 60,000 miles on Atlas), mounting bolts (reuse originals or source replacements from hardware store), electrical wiring harness, dielectric grease (apply small amount to boot interior on install). |
| Tools You Need | 10mm socket and ratchet (typical coil mounting bolt size), spark plug socket and extension (if replacing plugs together, 14mm or 16mm depending on engine), torque wrench, dielectric grease, basic hand tools. The entire coil set replacement takes 1 to 2 hours for an experienced DIY mechanic. |
The Volkswagen Atlas ignition coil is compatible with the following Atlas variants. Confirm year and engine before ordering.
| Volkswagen Atlas 2.0T S (2018 to current) | Base trim with 2.0L TSI I4, uses 4 coils |
| Volkswagen Atlas 2.0T SE (2018 to current) | Mid-trim with 2.0L TSI I4 |
| Volkswagen Atlas 3.6L SE with Technology (2018 to current) | Mid-trim with VR6 narrow-angle V6, uses 6 coils |
| Volkswagen Atlas SEL (2018 to current) | Higher trim, available with 2.0T or 3.6L VR6 |
| Volkswagen Atlas SEL Premium (2018 to current) | Top trim, typically 3.6L VR6 |
| Volkswagen Atlas R-Line (2019 to current) | Sport-styled trim, available with 2.0T or VR6 |
| Volkswagen Atlas Cross Sport (2020 to current) | 5-passenger variant, available with 2.0T or VR6 |
Not directly compatible with other VW models even with the same engine code without confirming exact part number, since the Atlas-specific ignition coil placement and connector orientation may differ from the same engine in Tiguan, Passat, Jetta, or other VW vehicles. The 2.0T TSI engine in particular varies in specific coil design across VW model lines. Always confirm fitment by Volkswagen part number or VIN call. Other VW models with similar engines may share coils, call to verify cross-compatibility.
Not sure if this Volkswagen Atlas ignition coil fits your car? Call (240) 301-0095 with your year (2018 to current), engine (2.0L TSI I4 or 3.6L VR6), and trim. Our team confirms the right coil for your specific Atlas application before we ship. The 2.0T and VR6 coils are not interchangeable, so engine variant is the most critical detail to confirm.
These new OEM-specification Volkswagen Atlas ignition coils are inspected before shipping. Quality control includes:
Output voltage tested to specification (up to 40,000V secondary)
Primary winding resistance verified within OEM tolerance
Secondary winding resistance verified within OEM tolerance
Spark plug boot inspected for cracks or splits
Internal spring contact verified for proper extension
Electrical connector terminals straight and undamaged
External epoxy housing free from cracks or chips
Mounting hole properly sized for OEM bolt
Each coil ships with manufacturer markings and electrical specifications labeled. For set replacements, all coils ship together in a single package with engine variant clearly identified (2.0T set of 4, or VR6 set of 6). Apply a small amount of dielectric grease to the boot interior on install to prevent voltage tracking and ease future removal.
Why Buy From Vaz Auto Solutions
- New OEM-specification Volkswagen Atlas ignition coils at $29 each, fraction of dealer cost
Bench tested output voltage and resistance before shipping
Both engine variants supported (2.0T TSI I4 and 3.6L VR6)
Individual coils or complete engine sets available
- Set of 4 ($109) for 2.0T or set of 6 ($159) for VR6 complete replacement
Volkswagen Chattanooga TN built vehicle expertise
2018 to current production coverage
- All Atlas trims compatible (S, SE, SEL, SEL Premium, R-Line, Cross Sport)

















Michael C., Nashville TN, 2019 Volkswagen Atlas 3.6L VR6 –
Threw a P0303 code on my 19 Atlas VR6 at 95k miles. Cylinder 3 misfire, clearly a bad coil. Ordered the set of 6 VR6 coils from Vaz at $159 since I figured the others would follow. Local Chattanooga VW dealer wanted $720 for just the parts. Installed all 6 in about 90 minutes, swapped plugs at the same time. No more misfires, runs smoothly. Real money saver, fair quality. Vaz knew the difference between 2.0T and VR6 coils.
☆ Jennifer R., Sacramento CA, 2020 Volkswagen Atlas 2.0T SE –
Bought a single coil for my 20 Atlas 2.0T when cylinder 2 started misfiring at 65k miles. Vaz had the right part for $29. Bench test labels gave confidence. Replaced just the failed coil since car is still relatively low mileage. Working perfectly. One star off because I ended up replacing two more coils within 6 months as they failed in sequence, should have ordered the set initially. Lesson learned about VW coils.