How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2018 Kia Sportage (Step-by-Step Guide)
Tools, belt routing tips, safety steps, and wheel torque specs for a smooth DIY install for 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022
How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2018 Kia Sportage (Step-by-Step Guide)
Tools, belt routing tips, safety steps, and wheel torque specs for a smooth DIY install for 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022
đź”§ Sportage - Serpentine Belt Replacement
Your Sportage uses one main “serpentine belt” (a single long belt) to drive accessories like the alternator and A/C. Replacing it is mostly about safely relieving the spring-loaded belt tensioner and routing the new belt correctly.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 1.0-2.0 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- Work on a cool engine—hot pulleys and the radiator area can burn you.
- Keep fingers, hair, and clothing away from the belt path at all times.
- Support the vehicle with jack stands before going under it; never rely on a floor jack alone.
- Do not start the engine until all tools are removed from the engine bay.
- Battery disconnect is not required for this job, but keep the key/fob away so the engine can’t be started accidentally.
đź”§ Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- Floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum)
- Jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum)
- Wheel chocks
- Breaker bar 1/2"
- Serpentine belt tool (specialty)
- Socket set metric 10mm
- Socket set metric 12mm
- Socket set metric 14mm
- Socket set metric 17mm
- Ratchet 3/8"
- Torque wrench 1/2"
- Trim clip removal tool
- Flathead screwdriver
- Needle-nose pliers
- Work light
- Mechanic gloves
- Safety glasses
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Serpentine belt - Qty: 1
đź“‹ Before You Begin
- Park on level ground, shift to Park, and set the parking brake.
- Chock the rear wheels using wheel chocks.
- Open the hood and find the belt routing diagram (usually on the underside of the hood or near the radiator support). If it’s missing, take a clear photo of the current belt routing before removal.
- Know the key parts: the belt tensioner is a spring-loaded arm that keeps the belt tight; you rotate it with a wrench to remove/install the belt.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Remove the right front wheel (for access)
- Use a breaker bar 1/2" with the correct lug socket to slightly loosen the lug nuts while the tire is on the ground.
- Lift the right front with a floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum) and support it with jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum).
- Remove the lug nuts and wheel.
- Reinstall torque later: Torque to 90-110 Nm (66-81 ft-lbs).
Step 2: Remove the right-side lower splash shield
- Use a trim clip removal tool and flathead screwdriver to remove plastic clips.
- Use a 10mm socket (and/or 12mm socket, depending on fasteners) with a ratchet 3/8" to remove bolts and take off the splash shield section.
- Lay fasteners out in a pattern.
Step 3: Relieve belt tension
- Locate the belt tensioner from the wheel-well opening. The tensioner has a hex on the arm for a wrench/socket.
- Fit either a 14mm socket or 17mm socket (whichever matches your tensioner) on a breaker bar 1/2" (or use a serpentine belt tool (specialty)).
- Rotate the tensioner smoothly to relieve tension (it’s spring-loaded, so it will push back).
- While holding the tensioner rotated, slide the belt off one easy-to-reach pulley (usually the alternator or a smooth idler).
- Slowly release the tensioner back to its resting position—do not let it snap back.
Step 4: Remove the old belt and inspect pulleys
- Pull the belt out through the wheel-well opening.
- Spin the pulleys by hand (with the engine OFF): they should turn smoothly and quietly.
- Check the tensioner and idler for wobble or grinding; if you feel roughness, plan to replace that component soon.
Step 5: Route the new belt
- Compare the old and new belt length and rib count before installing.
- Route the new belt following the under-hood routing diagram (ribs go into grooved pulleys; smooth pulleys ride on the belt’s smooth back).
- Leave the belt off one upper/easy pulley as your “last pulley” to slip on after tension is released.
Step 6: Apply tension and finish installation
- Use the 14mm socket or 17mm socket with the breaker bar 1/2" to rotate the tensioner again.
- Slip the belt fully onto the last pulley, then slowly release the tensioner.
- Visually confirm the belt ribs are seated in every grooved pulley all the way around (no ribs hanging off an edge).
- If it looks “one rib off,” redo it.
Step 7: Reinstall splash shield and wheel
- Reinstall the splash shield using the 10mm socket/12mm socket, ratchet 3/8", and clips using the trim clip removal tool.
- Reinstall the wheel and hand-thread lug nuts.
- Lower the vehicle and use a torque wrench 1/2": Torque to 90-110 Nm (66-81 ft-lbs).
âś… After Repair
- Start the engine and watch the belt for 20–30 seconds: it should run centered with no wobble.
- Listen for squealing or chirping; shut the engine off immediately if the belt walks off a pulley.
- Turn A/C on and add electrical load (headlights) briefly to confirm normal operation.
- Recheck the belt seating one more time after the first short drive.
đź’° DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $150-$300 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $25-$60 (parts only)
You Save: $125-$240 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 1.0-1.5 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.


















