How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2012-2015 Hyundai Tucson (Engine: Inline 4 2.0L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with belt routing tips, tools, safety checks, and cost savings for 2012, 2013
How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2012-2015 Hyundai Tucson (Engine: Inline 4 2.0L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with belt routing tips, tools, safety checks, and cost savings for 2012, 2013
🔧 Tucson - Serpentine Belt Replacement
The serpentine belt drives accessories like the alternator, A/C compressor, and water pump pulley system on your Tucson. Replace it if it is cracked, glazed, squealing, frayed, or if the ribs are missing.
This is a good beginner repair, but belt routing matters. Take a picture before removal so the new belt goes on the same way.
Difficulty Level: Beginner | Estimated Time: 30-60 minutes
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Work only with the engine off and fully cool.
- ⚠️ Keep fingers away from pulleys and the belt tensioner while releasing tension.
- ⚠️ Disconnect the negative battery cable to prevent accidental starting.
- ⚠️ If raising the vehicle, always support your Tucson with jack stands before reaching underneath.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- 10mm socket
- 14mm socket
- 17mm socket
- 21mm socket
- 3/8-inch ratchet
- Long-handle serpentine belt tool (specialty)
- Torque wrench 10-100 ft-lbs
- Flat-blade screwdriver
- Trim clip removal tool
- Floor jack rated 2-ton minimum
- Jack stands rated 2-ton minimum
- Wheel chocks
- Flashlight
- Safety glasses
- Nitrile gloves
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Serpentine belt - Qty: 1
📋 Before You Begin
- Park your Tucson on level ground.
- Set the parking brake and place the manual transmission in gear.
- Place wheel chocks behind the rear wheels.
- Open the hood and let the engine cool completely.
- A belt tensioner is a spring-loaded arm that keeps the serpentine belt tight.
- A pulley is a round wheel the belt wraps around to spin accessories.
- Take a clear photo of the belt routing before removing the old belt.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Disconnect the Battery
- Use a 10mm socket to loosen the negative battery cable clamp.
- Move the cable aside so it cannot spring back onto the battery post.
- This prevents accidental cranking while your hands are near the belt.
Step 2: Access the Belt Area
- Use a flashlight to look down the passenger side of the engine bay.
- If you need more room, raise the front passenger side with a floor jack rated 2-ton minimum.
- Support your Tucson with jack stands rated 2-ton minimum.
- Use a 21mm socket to remove the passenger front wheel if needed.
- Use a trim clip removal tool, flat-blade screwdriver, and 10mm socket to remove the inner splash shield.
Step 3: Record the Belt Routing
- Use your phone to take a picture of how the belt wraps around each pulley.
- Compare the belt path to the belt routing decal under the hood if present.
- Make sure you can identify the smooth side and ribbed side of the belt.
- The ribbed side rides on grooved pulleys; the smooth side rides on smooth pulleys.
- Photo first, wrench second.
Step 4: Release Belt Tension
- Place a 14mm socket or 17mm socket on the automatic belt tensioner bolt head.
- Attach the long-handle serpentine belt tool or 3/8-inch ratchet.
- Rotate the tensioner slowly to relieve belt tension.
- While holding the tensioner, slide the belt off the easiest upper pulley.
- Slowly release the tensioner back to its resting position.
- Do not let the tensioner snap back.
Step 5: Remove the Old Belt
- Pull the belt off the remaining pulleys by hand.
- Guide the belt out through the engine bay or wheel-well opening.
- Use a flashlight to check that no pieces of old belt remain in the pulley grooves.
Step 6: Inspect the Pulleys and Tensioner
- Spin each accessible pulley by hand while wearing nitrile gloves.
- Each pulley should spin smoothly with no grinding, wobble, or rough noise.
- Use a flashlight to inspect the tensioner arm for crooked alignment.
- If the tensioner is weak, noisy, or crooked, replace it before installing the new belt.
- Noisy pulleys ruin new belts fast.
Step 7: Install the New Belt
- Route the new serpentine belt around the lower pulleys first.
- Follow your photo exactly.
- Keep the belt ribs fully seated in every grooved pulley.
- Leave the easiest smooth upper pulley for last.
- Use the 14mm socket or 17mm socket with the long-handle serpentine belt tool to rotate the tensioner again.
- Slide the belt over the final pulley.
- Slowly release the tensioner until it tightens the belt.
Step 8: Verify Belt Alignment
- Use a flashlight to inspect every pulley.
- Make sure the belt is centered and all ribs are sitting inside the pulley grooves.
- If the belt hangs off any pulley edge, use the 14mm socket or 17mm socket to release tension and reseat it.
- Do not start the engine until the belt is perfectly aligned.
Step 9: Reinstall the Splash Shield and Wheel
- Use the trim clip removal tool, flat-blade screwdriver, and 10mm socket to reinstall the passenger-side splash shield.
- Reinstall the passenger front wheel using a 21mm socket.
- Lower your Tucson from the jack stands rated 2-ton minimum using the floor jack rated 2-ton minimum.
- Use a torque wrench 10-100 ft-lbs and 21mm socket to tighten the wheel lug nuts in a star pattern.
- Torque to 88-107 Nm (65-79 ft-lbs).
Step 10: Reconnect the Battery and Test
- Use a 10mm socket to reconnect the negative battery cable.
- Start the engine and let it idle.
- Watch the belt for 30 seconds with a flashlight.
- The belt should run straight with no wobble, squeal, or flapping.
- Turn the A/C on and listen again for belt noise.
✅ After Repair
- ✅ Shut the engine off and recheck belt alignment after the first test run.
- ✅ Take a short drive, then listen for squealing during startup and acceleration.
- ✅ If the belt squeals, inspect for misrouting, worn tensioner, oil contamination, or a seized pulley.
- ✅ Recheck the belt after a few days of driving to make sure it remains seated correctly.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $120-$250 parts + labor
DIY Cost: $25-$60 parts only
You Save: $95-$190 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 0.5-1.0 hour.
🎯 Ready to get started?
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