How to Replace the A/C Compressor on a 2009-2010 Toyota Corolla (R-134a System) (Trim: Base | Engine: Inline 4 1.8L)
Step-by-step DIY instructions with required tools, parts, safety tips, and key torque specs
How to Replace the A/C Compressor on a 2009-2010 Toyota Corolla (R-134a System) (Trim: Base | Engine: Inline 4 1.8L)
Step-by-step DIY instructions with required tools, parts, safety tips, and key torque specs for 2009, 2010
🔧 Corolla - A/C Compressor Replacement
Replacing the A/C compressor on your Corolla means removing the drive belt, disconnecting the refrigerant lines, swapping the compressor, then evacuating and recharging the system. This job is part mechanical and part A/C-service—refrigerant must be recovered and the system must be vacuumed before recharging to prevent damage and leaks.
Difficulty Level: Advanced | Estimated Time: 3-6 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Refrigerant is under high pressure—do not open A/C lines unless the system has been professionally recovered.
- ⚠️ Wear safety glasses and gloves—refrigerant/oil can cause frostbite and eye injury.
- ⚠️ Support the car on jack stands—never rely on a floor jack.
- ⚠️ Disconnect the negative battery cable before unplugging the compressor electrical connector.
- ⚠️ Keep A/C ports capped—moisture ruins the system and causes corrosion.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- Safety glasses
- Nitrile gloves
- Wheel chocks
- Floor jack (rated 2-ton minimum)
- Jack stands (rated 2-ton minimum)
- 21mm socket
- 1/2" drive breaker bar
- 10mm socket
- 12mm socket
- 14mm socket
- 3/8" drive ratchet
- 6" extension
- Trim clip removal tool
- Flathead screwdriver
- Torque wrench (10–80 ft-lbs)
- Inch-pound torque wrench (50–250 in-lbs)
- Line caps/plug kit (specialty)
- A/C manifold gauge set for R-134a (specialty)
- Vacuum pump (specialty)
- Refrigerant scale (specialty)
- Refrigerant recovery machine (specialty)
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- A/C compressor - Qty: 1
- A/C compressor manifold O-ring set - Qty: 1
- Receiver/drier - Qty: 1
- R-134a refrigerant - Qty: 16 oz (system charge is typically about 15.9 oz)
- A/C compressor oil (ND-OIL 8 / PAG) - Qty: 1
📋 Before You Begin
- Park on level ground, set the parking brake, and place wheel chocks behind the rear wheels.
- Have an A/C shop recover the refrigerant first using a refrigerant recovery machine.
- Disconnect the negative battery cable using a 10mm socket.
- If your old compressor failed noisily or “grenaded,” plan on extra cleaning—metal debris can require condenser replacement and system flushing.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Raise the front-right corner and remove the wheel
- Loosen the front-right lug nuts with a 21mm socket and breaker bar (do not remove yet).
- Lift the car with a floor jack and support it with jack stands.
- Remove the lug nuts and wheel using a 21mm socket.
Step 2: Remove the right splash shield (fender liner access)
- Remove the clips/screws using a trim clip removal tool and flathead screwdriver.
- Pull the splash shield back enough to access the compressor area.
Step 3: Remove the serpentine drive belt from the compressor
- Use a 14mm socket and 3/8" drive ratchet on the belt tensioner bolt to rotate the tensioner and relieve belt tension.
- Slip the belt off the A/C compressor pulley and slowly release the tensioner.
- Tip: Take a belt-routing photo first.
Step 4: Unplug the compressor electrical connector
- Press the lock tab and unplug the connector by hand (use a flathead screwdriver gently if it’s stuck).
Step 5: Disconnect the A/C refrigerant lines from the compressor
- Confirm the system is fully recovered before opening lines.
- Remove the line/manifold retaining bolt using a 10mm socket and ratchet.
- Carefully pull the manifold straight off the compressor.
- Immediately cap/plug the open lines and compressor ports using a line caps/plug kit (specialty).
- Remove and discard the old O-rings.
- Torque to 9.8 Nm (87 in-lbs) for the line/manifold bolt during reassembly.
Step 6: Remove the A/C compressor
- Support the compressor with one hand.
- Remove the compressor mounting bolts using a 12mm socket, ratchet, and extension.
- Lower and remove the compressor through the wheel well opening.
- Torque to 25 Nm (18 ft-lbs) for the compressor mounting bolts during reassembly.
Step 7: Match compressor oil amount (critical)
- Drain oil from the old compressor into a clean measuring container (measure how much came out).
- Add the same amount of fresh A/C compressor oil (ND-OIL 8 / PAG) into the new compressor.
- Rotate the new compressor clutch/pulley by hand several turns to distribute oil.
- Tip: Wrong oil amount can damage the compressor.
Step 8: Install the new compressor
- Position the compressor and start all mounting bolts by hand.
- Tighten using a 12mm socket and torque wrench.
- Torque to 25 Nm (18 ft-lbs)
Step 9: Reconnect the A/C lines with new O-rings
- Install new O-rings (lightly coat them with clean ND-OIL 8 so they don’t tear).
- Push the manifold straight in (do not force at an angle).
- Install the retaining bolt using a 10mm socket, then tighten with an inch-pound torque wrench.
- Torque to 9.8 Nm (87 in-lbs)
Step 10: Reinstall the drive belt
- Route the belt correctly.
- Rotate the tensioner with a 14mm socket and ratchet, slip the belt onto the compressor pulley, then release tension slowly.
- Visually confirm the belt is fully seated in every pulley groove.
Step 11: Reinstall splash shield and wheel
- Reinstall the splash shield fasteners using a trim clip removal tool and flathead screwdriver.
- Install the wheel and hand-thread lug nuts.
- Lower the car off the jack stands using the floor jack.
- Tighten lug nuts in a star pattern using a 21mm socket and torque wrench.
- Torque to 103 Nm (76 ft-lbs)
Step 12: Evacuate and recharge the A/C system
- Connect an A/C manifold gauge set for R-134a (specialty) to the high/low service ports.
- Pull a deep vacuum using a vacuum pump (specialty) for 30–45 minutes.
- Close valves and verify it holds vacuum (no leak) for 10–15 minutes.
- Recharge by weight using an R-134a refrigerant canister on a refrigerant scale (specialty).
- Charge amount is typically about 450 g (15.9 oz) of R-134a for your Corolla.
✅ After Repair
- Reconnect the negative battery cable using a 10mm socket.
- Start the engine and set A/C to MAX; confirm the compressor engages and the center vent air gets cold.
- Check for belt noise and verify the belt tracks straight on pulleys.
- Inspect all A/C line joints for oily residue (a common sign of a slow leak).
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $900-$1,600 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $250-$650 (parts only)
You Save: $650-$950 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 2.5-4.5 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 A/C Compressor replace for these Toyota vehicles
| Year Make Model | Sub Model | Engine | Body Style |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 Toyota Corolla | Base | Inline 4 1.8L | - |
| 2010 Toyota Corolla | LE | Inline 4 1.8L | - |
| 2010 Toyota Corolla | S | Inline 4 1.8L | - |
| 2010 Toyota Corolla | XLE | Inline 4 1.8L | - |
| 2010 Toyota Corolla | XRS | Inline 4 2.4L | - |
| 2009 Toyota Corolla | Base | Inline 4 1.8L | - |
| 2009 Toyota Corolla | LE | Inline 4 1.8L | - |
| 2009 Toyota Corolla | S | Inline 4 1.8L | - |
| 2009 Toyota Corolla | XLE | Inline 4 1.8L | - |
| 2009 Toyota Corolla | XRS | Inline 4 2.4L | - |


















