How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2015 Hyundai Tucson (Step-by-Step Guide)
Tools, parts, belt routing tips, safety steps, and wheel-well access instructions for a smooth install for 2014, 2015
How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2015 Hyundai Tucson (Step-by-Step Guide)
Tools, parts, belt routing tips, safety steps, and wheel-well access instructions for a smooth install for 2014, 2015
🔧 Tucson - Serpentine Belt Replacement
The serpentine belt runs your A/C, alternator (battery charging), and other accessories. If it’s cracked, squealing, or glazed, replacing it helps prevent a no-charge condition or overheating.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 0.5-1.5 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Work on a cold engine; hot parts can burn you.
- ⚠️ Keep fingers/clothes clear of pulleys; never work with the engine running.
- ⚠️ The belt tensioner is spring-loaded; it can snap back quickly.
- ⚠️ If you raise the vehicle, support it with jack stands before going under.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- 17mm socket
- 3/8" drive ratchet
- 3/8" drive breaker bar (18" minimum)
- 10mm socket
- Trim clip removal tool
- Flathead screwdriver
- Torque wrench (10-150 ft-lbs)
- Floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum)
- Jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum)
- Wheel chocks
- Work light
- Mechanic gloves
- Safety glasses
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Serpentine belt - Qty: 1
- Serpentine belt tensioner assembly - Qty: 1 (optional if noisy/weak)
- Idler pulley - Qty: 1 (optional if noisy/rough)
📋 Before You Begin
- Park on level ground, set the parking brake, and chock the rear wheels.
- Open the hood and find the belt routing diagram (usually on the radiator support/underside of hood). If it’s missing, take a clear photo of the current routing before removing the belt.
- If you choose the wheel-well access method, loosen the right-front wheel lug nuts slightly before lifting.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Get access to the belt
- Use a work light to locate the belt and the belt tensioner.
- If you have enough room from the top, you can often do this without removing the wheel.
- If access is tight, use the wheel-well method below (recommended for beginners).
Step 2: (Recommended) Raise the right-front and remove the wheel
- Use a 17mm socket and breaker bar to loosen the right-front lug nuts 1/2 turn.
- Lift the right-front using a floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum) at the proper jacking point.
- Set the vehicle onto jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum) and confirm it’s stable.
- Remove the lug nuts with a 17mm socket and remove the wheel.
Step 3: Remove the right-front splash shield section (if equipped)
- Use a trim clip removal tool to pop out plastic push-clips.
- Use a 10mm socket to remove any small bolts holding the shield.
- Move the shield aside to expose the belt/pulleys.
- Keep clips together so none get lost.
Step 4: Locate the belt tensioner and relieve tension
- Find the belt tensioner (the spring-loaded arm that keeps the belt tight).
- Place a 17mm socket and breaker bar on the tensioner pulley center bolt.
- Rotate the tensioner smoothly to relieve belt tension, then slide the belt off one easy-to-reach pulley.
- Slowly let the tensioner return to its resting position.
Step 5: Remove the old belt and compare lengths
- Pull the belt out of the engine bay/wheel well by hand.
- Lay the old belt next to the new belt to confirm the overall length and rib count match.
- If the old belt is shredded, inspect the pulleys carefully for damage or misalignment.
Step 6: Inspect pulleys and tensioner before installing the new belt
- Spin each accessible pulley by hand; it should feel smooth and quiet.
- Wiggle pulleys gently; there should be no wobble.
- If you hear grinding or feel roughness, plan to replace the noisy pulley/tensioner before finishing.
Step 7: Route the new belt
- Route the new belt using the under-hood diagram (or your photo), keeping ribs aligned in the grooved pulleys.
- Leave the easiest smooth pulley for last (usually an idler or alternator area) so you can slip it on after tension is released.
- Use your work light to confirm the belt is centered on every pulley.
Step 8: Apply tension and seat the belt
- Use a 17mm socket and breaker bar to rotate the tensioner again.
- Slip the belt fully onto the last pulley, then slowly release the tensioner.
- Double-check: the belt must sit fully in the grooves on every ribbed pulley.
Step 9: Reinstall splash shield and wheel
- Reinstall the splash shield using the 10mm socket, trim clip removal tool, and flathead screwdriver as needed.
- Reinstall the wheel and hand-thread lug nuts.
- Lower the vehicle off the jack stands using the floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum).
- Tighten lug nuts in a star pattern using a torque wrench (10-150 ft-lbs): Torque to 90 Nm (66 ft-lbs).
✅ After Repair
- Start the engine and watch the belt for 30-60 seconds; it should run smoothly with no wobble.
- Listen for squealing or chirping. If you hear noise, shut it off and re-check belt alignment on every pulley.
- Turn the A/C on and confirm normal operation (no belt slip noise).
- Recheck the belt routing one more time after a short test drive.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $150-$300 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $30-$80 (parts only)
You Save: $120-$220 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 0.7-1.2 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.

















