
Car Won’t Start Guide · Columbia, SC
Why Won’t My Car Start? 7 Common Causes (and the Fix for Each)
A dead car is stressful — but the cause is usually one of a few things. Here’s how to tell what’s wrong and what it takes to fix it.
First: What Is Your Car Doing?
Before anything else, notice what your car does when you turn the key — it points straight at the cause:
- Rapid clicking — almost always a dead or weak battery.
- One loud clunk, then nothing — usually the starter.
- Cranks slowly, then quits — a weak battery, common after Columbia’s summer heat.
- Cranks normally but won’t fire — fuel or a sensor issue.
- Totally dead — no lights, no click — battery, a connection, or a fuse.
7 Reasons a Car Won’t Start
1. A dead or weak battery
The number-one cause by far. Batteries in the South often last only 2.5–3 years because heat evaporates the fluid and corrodes the plates. If it clicks fast or cranks slow, start here. A jump may get you going, but the battery usually needs testing or replacing.
2. Corroded or loose battery terminals
White or blue crust on the terminals, or a loose clamp, can stop a good battery from starting the car. Cleaning and tightening the connections sometimes fixes it entirely.
3. A failing alternator
If the car starts on a jump but dies again shortly after, the alternator probably isn’t charging the battery. You may also see a battery light or dim headlights at idle.
4. A bad starter
One loud click (or a grind) with no crank usually means the starter motor has failed. A jump won’t help — the starter itself needs replacing.
5. No fuel or a failing fuel pump
If it cranks strongly but won’t catch, the engine may not be getting fuel. A worn fuel pump, clogged filter, or crank/cam sensor is a common culprit — and a scan tool helps pin it down.
6. Ignition switch or key problems
Nothing at all when you turn the key — no lights, no click — can be the ignition switch, a dead key fob battery, or the anti-theft system refusing to let the car start.
7. A blown fuse or bad ground
A single blown fuse or a corroded ground strap can cut power to the starting system and leave you stranded even with a healthy battery.
Call a Mobile Mechanic or Tow It?
Here’s the good news: most no-starts are a battery, alternator, or starter — and all three are fixable right where your car sits. That means you usually skip the tow entirely. Call us, we diagnose it on the spot, and you get an upfront price before we touch anything. See our no-start service, battery replacement, and alternator & starter pages, or read what it costs.


