How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2016 Nissan Versa 1.6L
Step-by-step instructions with tools, parts, torque specs, coolant refill, and leak checks for 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2016 Nissan Versa 1.6L
Step-by-step instructions with tools, parts, torque specs, coolant refill, and leak checks for 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
🔧 Water Pump - Replacement
The water pump circulates coolant through the engine to keep it from overheating. On your Versa, this is a front-of-engine repair that requires draining the coolant, removing the drive belt, and swapping the pump and gasket as a sealed assembly.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 3-5 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- Let the engine cool completely before opening the cooling system. Hot coolant can cause serious burns.
- Use a drain pan and keep coolant away from children and pets.
- Disconnect the negative battery cable before working near the belt and fan area.
- Do not run the engine with the drive belt removed for more than a few seconds.
- Replace the coolant with the correct Nissan-spec long-life coolant and bleed air from the system after refill.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- 10mm socket
- 12mm socket
- 14mm socket
- Ratchet
- Short extension
- Torque wrench
- Serpentine belt tool (specialty)
- Drain pan
- Funnel
- Gasket scraper
- Plastic trim tool
- Shop towels
- Safety glasses
- Nitrile gloves
- Jack stands
- Floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum)
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Water pump - Qty: 1
- Water pump gasket - Qty: 1
- Engine coolant (Nissan long-life type) - Qty: 2 gallons
- Serpentine belt - Qty: 1
- Thermostat gasket - Qty: 1
📋 Before You Begin
- Park on level ground and set the parking brake.
- Let the engine cool fully before draining coolant.
- Disconnect the negative battery cable with a 10mm socket.
- Raise the front of the vehicle and support it securely with jack stands.
- Assumption: this is the 1.6L HR16DE engine with an accessory-driven water pump.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Drain the coolant
- Place a drain pan under the radiator.
- Open the radiator drain with a plastic trim tool or by hand if equipped.
- Remove the radiator cap only after the engine is cool.
- Drain the coolant completely and tighten the drain when finished.
Step 2: Remove the drive belt
- Use a serpentine belt tool (specialty) or 14mm socket on the belt tensioner.
- Rotate the tensioner to release belt tension.
- Slip the belt off the pulleys and remove it from the engine bay.
- Take a quick belt routing photo first.
Step 3: Access the water pump
- Use a 10mm socket to remove any splash shield or access cover blocking the pump area.
- Set the fasteners aside in order.
Step 4: Remove the water pump
- Use a 12mm socket to remove the water pump bolts.
- Loosen the bolts evenly so the pump comes off without binding.
- Pull the pump away from the engine and catch any remaining coolant.
- Remove the old gasket and clean the mating surface with a gasket scraper.
- Torque on installation: 12 N·m (106 in-lbs)
Step 5: Install the new water pump
- Install the new gasket on the pump or engine side, depending on the part design.
- Position the new pump and start all bolts by hand with a 12mm socket.
- Tighten the bolts evenly in a crisscross pattern.
- Torque the water pump bolts to 12 N·m (106 in-lbs)
Step 6: Reinstall the belt and covers
- Use the serpentine belt tool (specialty) or 14mm socket to release the tensioner again.
- Route the belt back on all pulleys exactly as before.
- Reinstall any splash shields or covers with a 10mm socket.
Step 7: Refill and bleed the cooling system
- Use a funnel to refill with the correct coolant mix.
- Fill the radiator and reservoir to the proper level.
- Start the engine and let it idle with the radiator cap off if allowed by the fill procedure.
- Watch for air bubbles and top off coolant as the level drops.
- Install the cap when the system is full and stable.
Step 8: Recheck for leaks
- Use a flashlight and shop towels to inspect the pump, hose connections, and drain area.
- Look for seepage while the engine is warm and again after a short road test.
✅ After Repair
- Monitor the temperature gauge on the first drive.
- Check coolant level again after the engine cools completely.
- Recheck for leaks around the pump, radiator drain, and hoses.
- If the heater blows cold, repeat the bleed process to remove trapped air.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $450-$850 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $90-$220 (parts only)
You Save: $360-$630 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 3-5 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.
















