The 2025 Hilux continues Toyota's reputation for durability, but the 1GD-FTV diesel has known DPF and injector issues, while both engines can develop timing chain stretch under hard use. Transmission oil cooler failures are surprisingly common on higher-mileage units.
DPF Clogging and Regen Failures (1GD-FTV Diesel)
Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 40,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: Check engine light with P2002/P242F codes, Limp mode during regen cycles, Excessive fuel consumption, Black smoke on startup
Fix: Short-trip driving kills these DPFs early. Forced regen via scan tool buys time, but most need DPF replacement or off-road delete where legal. DPF replacement is 4-6 hours with exhaust disassembly. Delete with tune is 3-4 hours but voids warranty and fails emissions.
Estimated cost: $2,800-4,200
Fuel Injector Failure (1GD-FTV Diesel)
Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Hard starting when cold, Rough idle with white smoke, Fuel in oil (dilution), Metallic knocking from specific cylinder
Fix: Third-gen 1GD injectors are better than earlier versions but still fail, often taking out the high-pressure pump when they do. One injector replacement is 2.5 hours; if the pump is contaminated, add another 4 hours plus pump cost. Always do fuel system flush and change oil after injector work.
Estimated cost: $1,200-3,800
Transmission Oil Cooler Line Corrosion
Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-110,000 mi
Symptoms: Transmission fluid leaking near radiator, Pink fluid under truck, Slipping or delayed shifts after leak develops, Milky transmission fluid if cooler ruptures internally
Fix: Steel lines rust through where they connect to the cooler, especially in salt states. External leak is 2 hours to replace lines. Internal rupture mixes coolant and ATF—requires cooler, full fluid flush, and sometimes transmission teardown if contamination sat. That's 8-12 hours total.
Estimated cost: $400-2,800
Timing Chain Stretch (Both Engines)
Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 120,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: Cold-start rattle for 2-3 seconds, Check engine light with cam/crank correlation codes, Rough idle, Loss of power on acceleration
Fix: Occurs on trucks run hard or with extended oil change intervals. 2TR-FE is 8-10 hours for chain, guides, and tensioner with head still on. 1GD-FTV diesel is worse—10-13 hours because of turbo and accessory removal. Always replace oil pump chain and water pump while you're in there.
Estimated cost: $2,200-3,800
Harmonic Balancer Separation (2TR-FE Gasoline)
Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 90,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: Visible wobble on crank pulley, Serpentine belt shredding repeatedly, Vibration at idle, Squealing from front of engine
Fix: Rubber isolator between hub and outer ring deteriorates. If it comes apart at speed, it takes out the crank seal, oil pan, and sometimes cracks the timing cover. Replacement is 2 hours, but if it grenades, you're looking at 6-8 hours for collateral damage. Check this at every service after 80k.
Estimated cost: $350-1,800
Diesel Lifter Tick and Camshaft Wear (1GD-FTV)
Rare · high severity
Typical onset: 100,000-160,000 mi
Symptoms: Persistent ticking that doesn't quiet after warmup, Metal shavings in oil filter, Loss of power, Eventually progresses to check engine light with misfire codes
Fix: Poor oil quality or extended drain intervals wear cam lobes and lifter faces. Needs camshaft, all 16 lifters, and head resurface if damage is severe. Figure 14-18 hours with head R&R, plus machine shop time. This one's a truck killer if ignored—catches people who run 15k-mile oil changes.
Estimated cost: $4,500-7,200
Owner tips
Diesel owners: do a long highway drive (30+ min at 60+ mph) every 200 miles to complete DPF regen cycles—prevents expensive clogs
Use Toyota 0W-30 or quality 5W-30 diesel oil and change every 5,000 miles max, especially on the 1GD-FTV—cheap insurance against cam and injector failures
Inspect harmonic balancer visually at every oil change on 2TR-FE engines after 80k miles—catching separation early saves thousands
Flush transmission fluid and inspect cooler lines every 50k miles—prevents the mixing catastrophe that totals transmissions
Solid truck if maintained religiously—buy the diesel only if you drive highway miles regularly; otherwise the 2.7L gas avoids DPF headaches and costs half as much to fix when things break.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
Fitment notes: Diesel engine requires higher CCA rating; located in engine bay
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Every control module on the 2016-2026 Toyota Hilux — where it lives, replacement time, and what it takes to program a replacement. Modules marked dealer / factory tool won't work after a part swap alone — budget for programming.
ABS Actuator / Brake Control Module (ABS/VSC ECU)1.8 hr R&Rrelearn only +0.3 hr▸ programming details
📍 Engine compartment, driver side near master cylinder or frame rail
🔧 Toyota Techstream or advanced aftermarket
⚠️ Brake bleeding and VSC zero-point calibration required after replacement
Air Conditioning Amplifier / HVAC Control Module (A/C AMP)1.5 hr R&Rrelearn only +0.2 hr▸ programming details
📍 Behind center dashboard or under passenger side dashboard
🔧 Toyota Techstream or aftermarket
⚠️ Climate control initialization and actuator calibration required
⚠️ Network configuration and module registration required; critical for CAN communication
Aftermarket tool coverage varies by software version and vehicle build — treat "aftermarket tool" rows as "usually possible" and verify against your tool maker's coverage list before promising a customer. Spot a wrong location or hour? Tell us — corrections ship fast here.
Size-standard part numbers — verify your connector type before buying. Rear blades are model-specific; check the package's vehicle list.
Fuel economy figures are EPA data via fueleconomy.gov (median across matching trims). Performance figures are compiled estimates for the 2025 Toyota Hilux 2.8L I4 Turbo Diesel 1GD-FTV and can vary by trim.
🔧 Database maintained under the daily editorial review of Chris Hackleman · Master Technician · 20+ years and Jeff Moore · Master Lexus & Toyota Mechanic · 20+ years.