How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2013 Hyundai Tucson (Engine: Inline 4 2.4L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, parts, coolant bleeding, torque specs, and safety tips
How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2013 Hyundai Tucson (Engine: Inline 4 2.4L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, parts, coolant bleeding, torque specs, and safety tips for 2013
🔧 Tucson - Water Pump Replacement
Replacing the water pump on your Tucson requires draining the cooling system, removing the accessory drive belt, removing the water pump pulley, and installing a new pump with a fresh gasket. The water pump moves coolant through the engine and radiator; if it leaks, gets noisy, or overheats the engine, it should be replaced promptly.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 3-5 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Work only on a completely cool engine. Hot coolant can cause severe burns.
- ⚠️ Keep coolant away from pets and children. It is toxic and tastes sweet.
- ⚠️ Support the vehicle with jack stands if raising it. Never rely on a jack alone.
- ⚠️ Disconnect the negative battery cable before working near the belt and pulleys.
- ⚠️ Do not spill coolant on the accessory belt. Coolant can make the belt slip or squeal.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- 10mm socket
- 12mm socket
- 14mm socket
- 17mm wrench
- 3/8-inch ratchet
- 3/8-inch extension set
- Torque wrench, 5-80 ft-lb range
- Flat-blade screwdriver
- Trim clip removal tool
- Drain pan, 2-gallon minimum
- Coolant funnel kit
- Gasket scraper, plastic
- Shop towels
- Floor jack, rated 2-ton minimum
- Jack stands, rated 2-ton minimum
- Wheel chocks
- Nitrile gloves
- Safety glasses
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Engine water pump - Qty: 1
- Water pump gasket - Qty: 1
- Hyundai-compatible prediluted coolant, ethylene glycol phosphate HOAT - Qty: 2 gallons
- Accessory drive belt - Qty: 1
- Thermostat housing O-ring or gasket - Qty: 1
📋 Before You Begin
- Park your Tucson on level ground and let the engine cool fully.
- Set the parking brake and place wheel chocks behind the rear wheels.
- Open the hood and remove the radiator cap only after the engine is cold.
- Disconnect the negative battery cable using a 10mm socket.
- Raise the front of the vehicle with a floor jack, rated 2-ton minimum, and support it with jack stands, rated 2-ton minimum.
- A torque wrench tightens bolts to the correct force so parts seal without cracking.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Remove Lower Splash Shield
- Put on safety glasses and nitrile gloves.
- Use a trim clip removal tool to remove the plastic clips from the lower engine splash shield.
- Use a 10mm socket and 3/8-inch ratchet to remove the splash shield bolts.
- Lower the splash shield and set it aside.
Step 2: Drain the Coolant
- Place a drain pan, 2-gallon minimum under the radiator drain area.
- Use a flat-blade screwdriver or your fingers to carefully open the radiator drain plug.
- Allow the coolant to drain completely.
- Close the radiator drain plug by hand, then snug it gently with the flat-blade screwdriver if needed.
- Do not overtighten plastic drain plugs.
Step 3: Remove the Accessory Drive Belt
- The accessory drive belt is the rubber belt that turns the alternator, water pump, and other front engine pulleys.
- Before removal, take a photo of the belt routing with your phone.
- Use a 17mm wrench on the belt tensioner to rotate the tensioner and release belt tension.
- Slide the belt off the pulleys and slowly let the tensioner return to its resting position.
- Remove the belt from the engine bay.
Step 4: Remove the Water Pump Pulley
- Use a 10mm socket, 3/8-inch ratchet, and 3/8-inch extension to loosen the water pump pulley bolts.
- If the pulley spins, hold it steady by pressing gently on the belt or using hand pressure while loosening the bolts.
- Remove the pulley bolts and lift the pulley off the water pump.
- Set the pulley and bolts aside in order.
Step 5: Remove Components Blocking Access
- Use a 10mm socket to move any small brackets or wire retainers blocking the water pump area.
- Use a 12mm socket or 14mm socket if a nearby support bracket blocks access to the pump bolts.
- Do not pull hard on wiring. Move harnesses gently by hand.
- Take photos before removing brackets.
Step 6: Remove the Old Water Pump
- Place the drain pan, 2-gallon minimum under the water pump area because more coolant will spill.
- Use a 10mm socket and 3/8-inch ratchet to remove the water pump mounting bolts.
- Note bolt locations as you remove them. Some bolts may be different lengths.
- Pull the water pump straight away from the engine.
- If it is stuck, tap gently by hand. Do not pry against soft aluminum sealing surfaces.
Step 7: Clean the Sealing Surface
- The sealing surface is the flat metal area where the gasket sits.
- Use a gasket scraper, plastic to remove old gasket material from the engine surface.
- Wipe the area clean with shop towels.
- Make sure no old gasket pieces fall into the coolant passages.
- Clean surfaces prevent leaks.
Step 8: Install the New Water Pump
- Place the new water pump gasket onto the new engine water pump.
- Position the water pump against the engine by hand.
- Start all water pump bolts by hand first to avoid cross-threading.
- Use a 10mm socket and 3/8-inch ratchet to snug the bolts evenly in a crisscross pattern.
- Use a torque wrench, 5-80 ft-lb range to tighten the water pump bolts to Torque to 9-11 Nm (80-97 in-lbs).
Step 9: Reinstall the Water Pump Pulley
- Place the pulley onto the new water pump hub.
- Start the pulley bolts by hand.
- Use a 10mm socket and 3/8-inch ratchet to snug the bolts evenly.
- Use a torque wrench, 5-80 ft-lb range to tighten the pulley bolts to Torque to 8-10 Nm (71-89 in-lbs).
Step 10: Reinstall Brackets and Retainers
- Use a 10mm socket, 12mm socket, or 14mm socket to reinstall any brackets removed earlier.
- Tighten small 10mm-head bracket bolts to Torque to 8-10 Nm (71-89 in-lbs).
- Tighten medium 12mm/14mm-head bracket bolts to Torque to 18-25 Nm (13-18 ft-lbs).
- Make sure wiring and hoses are clipped back into their original positions.
Step 11: Install the Accessory Drive Belt
- Route the new accessory drive belt around the pulleys using the photo you took earlier.
- Use a 17mm wrench to rotate the belt tensioner and create slack.
- Slide the belt fully onto the final pulley, then slowly release the tensioner.
- Check that the belt ribs sit correctly in every pulley groove.
- Misrouted belts can overheat the engine.
Step 12: Refill the Cooling System
- Install a coolant funnel kit into the radiator fill neck.
- Pour in Hyundai-compatible prediluted coolant, ethylene glycol phosphate HOAT slowly until the radiator is full.
- Fill the coolant reservoir to the “FULL” mark.
- Leave the funnel attached for bleeding air from the system.
Step 13: Bleed Air From the Cooling System
- Reconnect the negative battery cable using a 10mm socket.
- Start the engine and set the cabin heater to full hot with the fan on low.
- Let the engine idle while watching the coolant level in the coolant funnel kit.
- Add coolant as the level drops.
- When the upper radiator hose gets hot and bubbles stop appearing, the thermostat has opened and most air is out.
- Install the radiator cap once the level stays steady.
Step 14: Reinstall the Lower Splash Shield
- Shut the engine off and check for leaks around the water pump.
- Use a 10mm socket to reinstall the lower splash shield bolts.
- Use a trim clip removal tool by hand to reinstall the plastic clips.
- Lower the vehicle using the floor jack, rated 2-ton minimum after removing the jack stands, rated 2-ton minimum.
✅ After Repair
- ✅ Let the engine reach normal operating temperature and confirm the temperature gauge stays steady.
- ✅ Check for coolant leaks at the water pump, radiator drain plug, and hose connections.
- ✅ After the first test drive, let the engine cool fully and recheck the coolant reservoir level.
- ✅ Top off only with the same Hyundai-compatible coolant type if needed.
- ✅ Dispose of used coolant at a recycling center or auto parts store that accepts coolant.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $500-$850 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $120-$260 (parts only)
You Save: $380-$590 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 2.5-4.0 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 Engine Water Pump replace for these Hyundai vehicles
| Year Make Model | Sub Model | Engine | Body Style |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 Hyundai Tucson | - | Inline 4 2.0L | - |
| 2013 Hyundai Tucson | - | Inline 4 2.4L | - |
















