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2016 Mercedes-Benz GLC300
2016 - 2017 Mercedes-Benz GLC300
Inline 4 2.0L
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2016 GLC300 Serpentine Belt Replacement | GLC300 Drive Belt Replacement

2016 GLC300 Serpentine Belt Replacement | GLC300 Drive Belt Replacement

Suggested Parts

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Tools & Fluids

Safety
Safety
Glasses
Nitrile
Nitrile
Gloves
Flashlight
Flashlight
17mm
17mm
Socket
or (21/32")
3/8
3/8
Ratchet
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How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2016 Mercedes-Benz GLC300 2.0L Turbo

Step-by-step belt routing, tensioner release, required tools/parts, safety tips, and post-install checks for 2016, 2017

How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2016 Mercedes-Benz GLC300 2.0L Turbo

Step-by-step belt routing, tensioner release, required tools/parts, safety tips, and post-install checks for 2016, 2017

Orion
Orion

šŸ”§ GLC300 - Serpentine Belt Replacement

The serpentine belt drives key accessories like the alternator and A/C. On your GLC300, the job is mainly releasing the automatic belt tensioner, swapping the belt, and confirming the routing is correct.

Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 0.5-1.0 hours

Assumption: 2.0L turbo (M274) layout with automatic tensioner.


āš ļø Safety & Precautions

  • āš ļø Work on a cool engine; hot pulleys can burn you.
  • āš ļø Keep fingers/tools clear of pulleys at all times.
  • āš ļø Do not crank the engine with hands near the belt drive.
  • āš ļø Battery disconnect is not required, but keep the key far away so the engine can’t be started accidentally.

šŸ”§ Required Tools

You'll need the following tools for this repair:

  • Safety glasses
  • Nitrile gloves
  • LED flashlight
  • 17mm socket
  • 3/8" ratchet
  • 3/8" breaker bar (18-24")
  • 3/8" extension set (3" and 6")
  • Trim clip removal tool
  • 7mm nut driver
  • Torque wrench (3/8")

šŸ”© Required Parts

HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:

  • Serpentine belt - Qty: 1

šŸ“‹ Before You Begin

  • Park on level ground, put the transmission in Park, and set the parking brake.
  • Open the hood and let the engine cool fully.
  • Take a clear photo of the belt routing before removal. If there’s a routing sticker under the hood, photograph that too.

šŸ”Ø Step-by-Step Instructions

Follow these steps in order:

Step 1: Remove the engine cover (if equipped)

  • Grip the plastic engine cover firmly and pull straight upward to release the rubber grommets.
  • Use an LED flashlight to locate the belt drive area at the front of the engine.

Step 2: Create working room (only if needed)

  • If an intake snorkel/duct blocks access, loosen the clamp using a 7mm nut driver.
  • Release any plastic clips carefully using a trim clip removal tool (this tool helps pry clips without breaking them).
  • Move the duct aside without stressing any sensors or hoses.

Step 3: Locate the automatic belt tensioner

  • Look for the spring-loaded tensioner arm and its pulley in the belt path.
  • Find the hex point meant for a tool (commonly a bolt head/hex boss you can turn) on the tensioner assembly.

Step 4: Release belt tension

  • Install a 17mm socket on a 3/8" breaker bar (18-24").
  • Place it on the tensioner’s hex point and rotate the tensioner smoothly to relieve tension.
  • While holding the tensioner back, slide the belt off one easy-to-reach smooth pulley using your free hand.
  • Move slowly; the spring is strong.

Step 5: Remove the old belt

  • Let the tensioner return to rest slowly (don’t let it snap back).
  • Remove the belt from the remaining pulleys and pull it out of the engine bay.
  • Use an LED flashlight to inspect pulleys for wobble, cracks, or roughness while spinning by hand.

Step 6: Route the new belt

  • Match the new belt to the old one by length and rib count.
  • Route the belt following your photo/routing sticker, leaving one easy-to-access pulley for last.
  • Make sure the ribbed side sits fully in the grooves of every ribbed pulley.

Step 7: Reapply tension and seat the belt

  • Rotate the tensioner again using the 17mm socket and 3/8" breaker bar (18-24").
  • Slip the belt onto the last pulley.
  • Slowly release the tensioner so it applies tension to the belt.
  • Do a final ā€œfinger checkā€ around the belt: confirm it’s centered on every pulley.

Step 8: Reinstall removed items

  • Reinstall the intake duct (if removed) and tighten the clamp using a 7mm nut driver.
  • Reinstall the engine cover by aligning the posts and pressing down firmly.
  • Torque note: This belt-only method typically requires no critical fastener torques. If you removed any bolts, use a torque wrench (3/8") and tighten to the factory spec for that fastener.

āœ… After Repair

  • Before starting, look straight down the belt path with an LED flashlight to confirm the belt is seated in all grooves.
  • Start the engine and watch the belt for 15-30 seconds. It should run smoothly with no hopping, squealing, or wandering.
  • Turn A/C on and off and listen for chirps. If noise appears, shut off and re-check routing and seating.
  • After a short drive, recheck belt alignment again.

šŸ’° DIY vs Shop Cost

Shop Cost: $180-$350 (parts + labor)

DIY Cost: $30-$90 (parts only)

You Save: $150-$260 by doing it yourself!

Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 0.5-1.0 hours.


šŸŽÆ Ready to get started?

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