How to Replace Front Brake Pads and Rotors on a 2013-2021 Honda Accord (Trim: EX-L | Engine: V6 3.5L | Body: Sedan)
Step-by-step DIY guide with required tools/parts, safety tips, and key torque specs
How to Replace Front Brake Pads and Rotors on a 2013-2021 Honda Accord (Trim: EX-L | Engine: V6 3.5L | Body: Sedan)
Step-by-step DIY guide with required tools/parts, safety tips, and key torque specs for 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
đź”§ Accord - Front Brake Pads & Rotor Replacement
You’ll remove the front calipers, swap the brake pads, and replace the rotors. This restores braking power, reduces vibration/pulsation, and prevents uneven pad wear.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 2-4 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- 🛑 Work on level ground and chock the rear wheels.
- 🛑 Support the Accord with jack stands; never rely on a floor jack alone.
- 🛑 Do not let the brake caliper hang by the rubber hose.
- 🛑 Brake dust is harmful; use brake cleaner, not compressed air.
- 🛑 Keep grease off pad/rotor friction surfaces.
- 🛑 Battery disconnect is not required for this job.
đź”§ Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- Floor jack (rated 2-ton minimum)
- Jack stands (rated 2-ton minimum)
- Wheel chocks
- 19mm socket
- 1/2" drive breaker bar
- 1/2" drive torque wrench (20-150 ft-lbs range)
- Ratchet (3/8" drive)
- 12mm socket
- 17mm socket
- Phillips #3 screwdriver
- Hand impact driver (specialty)
- C-clamp (6" minimum)
- Brake caliper hanger hook (specialty)
- Flat plastic trim tool
- Wire brush
- Rubber mallet
- Drip pan
- Nitrile gloves
- Safety glasses
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Front brake pad set - Qty: 1
- Front brake rotors - Replace in pairs - Qty: 2
- Front brake pad hardware kit (clips) - Qty: 1
- Brake caliper slide pin grease (silicone brake grease) - Qty: 1
- Brake parts cleaner - Qty: 1
- DOT 3 brake fluid - Qty: 1 quart
đź“‹ Before You Begin
- đź§° Park on level ground, set the parking brake, and place wheel chocks behind both rear tires.
- đź§° Loosen the front lug nuts 1/2 turn using a 19mm socket and breaker bar before lifting.
- đź§° Lift the front and support the pinch welds/subframe with jack stands.
- 🧰 Turn the steering wheel to give more room at the side you’re working on.
- đź§° Pop the hood and remove the brake fluid reservoir cap (set it on loosely). This helps the piston push back smoothly.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Remove the front wheels
- Use a 19mm socket and ratchet to remove the lug nuts, then remove the wheel.
- Place the wheel under the rocker panel as an extra safety backup.
Step 2: Remove the brake caliper (do not open the hose)
- Turn the steering so you can see the back of the caliper.
- Use a 12mm socket and ratchet to remove the 2 caliper slide pin bolts.
- Lift the caliper off the bracket.
- Hang the caliper using a brake caliper hanger hook (specialty) so the hose isn’t stressed. Never let it dangle.
Step 3: Remove the old pads and hardware
- Pull the inner and outer pads out of the bracket by hand.
- Remove the stainless pad clips (hardware) from the bracket.
- Use brake parts cleaner and a wire brush to clean the bracket pad “tracks” where the clips sit.
Step 4: Remove the caliper bracket
- Use a 17mm socket and breaker bar to remove the 2 caliper bracket bolts.
- Set the bracket on a stable surface.
- When reinstalling later: Torque to 108 Nm (80 ft-lbs).
Step 5: Remove the rotor
- If your rotor has retaining screws, use a Phillips #3 screwdriver with a hand impact driver (specialty) to break them loose.
- Pull the rotor off the hub. If it’s stuck, tap around the hat of the rotor with a rubber mallet until it frees up.
- Use a wire brush to clean rust off the hub face so the new rotor sits flat. Flat hub = no pulsation.
Step 6: Install the new rotor
- Spray both sides of the new rotor with brake parts cleaner and wipe clean (removes shipping oil).
- Place the rotor onto the hub.
- If you removed retaining screws, reinstall them using a Phillips #3 screwdriver (snug only).
Step 7: Reinstall the caliper bracket with new hardware clips
- Install the new pad clips into the bracket by hand (they snap into place).
- Reinstall the bracket using a 17mm socket and ratchet.
- Final tighten using a torque wrench (a tool that measures tightening force): Torque to 108 Nm (80 ft-lbs).
Step 8: Service the slide pins
- Pull each slide pin out of the bracket by hand.
- Wipe old grease off the pins with a clean rag.
- Apply a thin coat of brake caliper slide pin grease (silicone brake grease) and reinstall the pins so they move smoothly.
Step 9: Install the new pads
- Apply a very thin smear of brake caliper slide pin grease (silicone brake grease) to the pad “ears” where they touch the new clips (metal-to-metal contact points only).
- Snap the new inner and outer pads into the bracket/clips.
Step 10: Compress the caliper piston
- Place one of the old pads against the caliper piston face.
- Use a C-clamp (6" minimum) (a screw clamp that squeezes the piston back in) to slowly press the piston fully into the caliper.
- Watch the brake fluid level at the reservoir; use a drip pan and remove excess fluid if it gets too high.
Step 11: Reinstall the caliper
- Set the caliper over the new pads.
- Install the 2 slide pin bolts using a 12mm socket and ratchet.
- Final tighten using a torque wrench: Torque to 34 Nm (25 ft-lbs).
Step 12: Reinstall wheels and torque lug nuts
- Reinstall the wheel and hand-thread the lug nuts.
- Lower the Accord to the ground.
- Use a torque wrench with a 19mm socket to tighten lug nuts in a star pattern: Torque to 108 Nm (80 ft-lbs).
Step 13: Repeat on the other front side
- Repeat Steps 1-12 for the other front brake.
- Always do pads and rotors in pairs.
âś… After Repair
- đź§Ş Before moving the car, pump the brake pedal 8-12 times until it feels firm.
- đź§Ş Check the brake fluid level and top off with DOT 3 brake fluid if needed.
- đź§Ş Start the engine and confirm the pedal stays firm with vacuum assist.
- đź§Ş Test drive at low speed first and confirm normal stopping and no pulling.
- đź§Ş Pad bedding (recommended): make 8-10 moderate stops from 40 mph to 10 mph, allowing a little cool-down time between stops.
- đź§Ş Recheck lug nut torque after 25-50 miles using a torque wrench.
đź’° DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $450-$800 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $150-$350 (parts only)
You Save: $300-$450 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 2-3 hours.
🎯 Ready to get started?
HowToo makes it easy: same-day/2-day shipping on every part, plus all the tools and specialty tools you need! Check out the parts and tools sections below to add everything to your cart.
Guide for Disc Brake Rotor replace for these Honda vehicles
| Year Make Model | Sub Model | Engine | Body Style |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 Honda Accord | Hybrid | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2021 Honda Accord | Hybrid EX-L | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2021 Honda Accord | Hybrid Touring | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2021 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2021 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2021 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2020 Honda Accord | Hybrid | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2020 Honda Accord | Hybrid EX-L | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2020 Honda Accord | Hybrid Touring | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2020 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2020 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2020 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2020 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2019 Honda Accord | Hybrid | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2019 Honda Accord | Hybrid EX-L | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2019 Honda Accord | Hybrid Touring | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2019 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2019 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2019 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2019 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2018 Honda Accord | Hybrid | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2018 Honda Accord | Hybrid EX-L | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2018 Honda Accord | Hybrid Touring | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2018 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2018 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2018 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2018 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2018 Honda Accord | Touring | Inline 4 1.5L | Sedan |
| 2017 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2017 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2017 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2017 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2017 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2017 Honda Accord | LX-S | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2017 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2017 Honda Accord | Hybrid | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2017 Honda Accord | Hybrid EX-L | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2017 Honda Accord | Hybrid Touring | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2017 Honda Accord | Sport Special Edition | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2016 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2016 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2016 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2016 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2016 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2016 Honda Accord | LX-S | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2016 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2015 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2015 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2015 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2015 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2015 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2015 Honda Accord | LX-S | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2015 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2015 Honda Accord | Hybrid | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2015 Honda Accord | Hybrid EX-L | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2015 Honda Accord | Hybrid Touring | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2014 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2014 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2014 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2014 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2014 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2014 Honda Accord | LX-S | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2014 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2014 Honda Accord | Hybrid | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2014 Honda Accord | Hybrid EX-L | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2014 Honda Accord | Hybrid Touring | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2014 Honda Accord | Plug-In | Inline 4 2.0L | Sedan |
| 2013 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2013 Honda Accord | EX | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2013 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2013 Honda Accord | EX-L | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2013 Honda Accord | LX | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |
| 2013 Honda Accord | LX-S | Inline 4 2.4L | Coupe |
| 2013 Honda Accord | Sport | Inline 4 2.4L | Sedan |


















