How to Replace the Radiator Hose on a 2016-2021 Hyundai Tucson (Engine: Inline 4 2.0L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, coolant refill, bleeding, torque specs, and safety tips for 2016, 2017, 2018
How to Replace the Radiator Hose on a 2016-2021 Hyundai Tucson (Engine: Inline 4 2.0L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, coolant refill, bleeding, torque specs, and safety tips for 2016, 2017, 2018
🔧 Tucson - Radiator Hose Replacement
This repair replaces a worn, leaking, cracked, or swollen radiator hose on your Tucson. The upper and lower radiator hoses carry hot coolant between the engine and radiator, so replacing a bad hose helps prevent overheating and coolant loss.
Difficulty Level: Beginner | Estimated Time: 1-2 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Only work on the cooling system when the engine is completely cool. Hot coolant can spray out and cause serious burns.
- 🧤 Wear safety glasses and gloves because coolant is slippery, toxic, and irritating to skin.
- 🐾 Keep coolant away from children and pets. It can be poisonous if swallowed.
- 🔋 Battery disconnect is not required for this hose replacement.
- ♻️ Catch all drained coolant and dispose of it properly. Do not pour coolant onto the ground or into drains.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- Safety glasses
- Nitrile gloves
- Drain pan 2-gallon minimum
- Flat-blade screwdriver 6mm tip
- Pliers 8-inch
- Hose clamp pliers (specialty)
- Pick tool 90-degree (specialty)
- Plastic trim clip remover
- 10mm socket
- 3/8-inch ratchet
- 3/8-inch extension 6-inch
- Funnel with long neck
- Clean shop towels
- Torque wrench 1/4-inch drive inch-pound
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Upper radiator hose - Qty: 1
- Lower radiator hose - Qty: 1 if replacing lower hose
- Radiator hose clamps - Qty: 2 per hose if clamps are corroded or weak
- Hyundai-compatible ethylene glycol coolant concentrate or premix - Qty: 1-2 gallons
- Distilled water - Qty: 1 gallon if using coolant concentrate
📋 Before You Begin
- Park your Tucson on level ground and let the engine cool for at least 2-3 hours.
- Set the parking brake and keep the transmission in Park.
- Open the hood and remove the radiator cap only when the engine is cold.
- A hose clamp is the metal ring that squeezes the hose tightly onto the radiator or engine fitting.
- A drain pan is a wide container used to catch old coolant so it does not spill.
- If replacing only one hose, still inspect both radiator hoses. A soft, swollen, cracked, or oil-soaked hose should be replaced.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Let the Engine Cool and Remove the Cap
- Put on safety glasses and nitrile gloves.
- Make sure the upper radiator hose feels cool by carefully touching it with your gloved hand.
- Slowly remove the radiator cap by hand. Push down and turn it counterclockwise.
- If you hear pressure escaping, stop and wait longer before removing the cap fully.
- Never open a hot cooling system.
Step 2: Position the Drain Pan
- Place the 2-gallon drain pan under the radiator drain area at the lower side of the radiator.
- Use a plastic trim clip remover if the lower splash shield blocks access to the radiator drain.
- Use a 10mm socket, 3/8-inch ratchet, and 6-inch extension to remove any splash shield fasteners if needed.
Step 3: Drain Some Coolant
- Open the radiator drain valve by hand or with pliers 8-inch if it is stiff.
- Drain enough coolant so the level is below the hose you are replacing.
- For the upper hose, draining about 1 gallon is usually enough.
- For the lower hose, drain the radiator fully because the hose sits low.
- Close the drain valve gently by hand after draining.
- Do not overtighten the plastic radiator drain valve.
Step 4: Remove the Hose Clamps
- Use hose clamp pliers to squeeze the spring clamp tabs together.
- A spring clamp is a factory clamp that opens when you squeeze the two raised tabs together.
- Slide the clamp several inches back onto the hose.
- If your Tucson has worm-drive clamps, use a flat-blade screwdriver 6mm tip to loosen each clamp.
- Repeat this at both ends of the hose.
Step 5: Break the Old Hose Loose
- Twist the hose gently by hand to break it free from the radiator or engine fitting.
- If the hose is stuck, use a pick tool 90-degree to carefully lift the hose edge.
- Do not stab or scrape the radiator neck. The radiator neck can crack if pried too hard.
- Use clean shop towels to catch coolant that spills when the hose comes loose.
- Twist first, pull second.
Step 6: Remove the Old Hose
- Pull the old hose off by hand once both ends are loose.
- Compare the old hose to the new hose before installing it.
- Make sure the bends, length, and diameter match.
- If the old hose has coolant residue, wipe the radiator and engine fittings clean with clean shop towels.
Step 7: Install the New Hose
- Slide the hose clamps onto the new hose before installing the hose.
- Push the new hose fully onto the radiator fitting and engine fitting by hand.
- The hose should sit past the raised bead on each fitting.
- The raised bead is the small bump near the end of the fitting that helps the hose stay sealed.
- Use hose clamp pliers to move each spring clamp into its original position behind the raised bead.
- If using worm-drive clamps, tighten with a flat-blade screwdriver 6mm tip.
- Torque worm-drive hose clamps to 3-4 Nm (27-35 in-lbs) if torque-type clamps are used.
Step 8: Refill the Cooling System
- Place a long-neck funnel into the radiator fill neck.
- Fill slowly with Hyundai-compatible ethylene glycol coolant premix.
- If using concentrate, mix it 50/50 with distilled water before pouring.
- Fill the radiator until coolant reaches the bottom of the filler neck.
- Fill the coolant reservoir to the “FULL” mark.
- Use clean shop towels to wipe up any spilled coolant.
Step 9: Bleed Air From the System
- Leave the radiator cap off.
- Start the engine and let it idle.
- Set the heater to full hot and the blower to low using the climate controls.
- Watch the coolant level in the radiator. Add coolant with the long-neck funnel as the level drops.
- When the upper radiator hose becomes warm, the thermostat has opened and coolant is flowing.
- A thermostat is the valve that opens when the engine reaches operating temperature.
- When bubbles stop appearing and the level stays steady, install the radiator cap by hand.
Step 10: Check for Leaks and Reinstall Covers
- Look closely at both hose ends while the engine idles.
- Use a flashlight if needed, but do not place hands near the radiator fan.
- If a clamp seeps, shut the engine off and let it cool before adjusting it with hose clamp pliers or a flat-blade screwdriver 6mm tip.
- Reinstall the lower splash shield using a 10mm socket, 3/8-inch ratchet, and 6-inch extension if removed.
- Torque splash shield bolts to 7-9 Nm (62-80 in-lbs).
✅ After Repair
- Let your Tucson reach normal operating temperature while watching the temperature gauge.
- Take a short 5-10 minute test drive and confirm the heater blows warm air.
- After the engine cools completely, recheck the radiator and reservoir levels.
- Top off the reservoir to the “FULL” mark if needed.
- Check the hose ends again the next day for dried coolant, wetness, or a sweet coolant smell.
- Dispose of used coolant at an approved recycling or service facility near Panipat. Do not dump it.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $180-$350 USD equivalent (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $35-$120 USD equivalent (parts only)
You Save: $145-$230 USD equivalent by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 0.8-1.5 hours.
🎯 Ready to get started?
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