How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2016 Chevrolet Traverse (Drive Belt Guide)
Step-by-step wheel-well access instructions with required tools, parts, safety tips, and torque specs for 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2016 Chevrolet Traverse (Drive Belt Guide)
Step-by-step wheel-well access instructions with required tools, parts, safety tips, and torque specs for 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
🔧 Traverse - Serpentine Belt Replacement
The serpentine belt (drive belt) runs the alternator, A/C compressor, power steering, and other accessories. Replacing a worn or cracked belt prevents squealing, charging problems, and sudden loss of steering assist or cooling.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 0.8-1.5 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Work on a cool engine; hot pulleys and exhaust can burn you.
- ⚠️ Keep fingers and tools away from pulleys; never check belt tracking with the engine running up close.
- ⚠️ Support your A4—use jack stands (never the jack alone).
- ⚠️ If you remove any splash shields, keep fasteners organized so nothing contacts the belt later.
- ⚠️ Battery disconnect is not required, but remove the key and keep the vehicle off.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- Floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum)
- Jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum)
- Wheel chocks
- Lug nut socket 22mm
- Breaker bar 1/2"
- Serpentine belt tool (specialty)
- 15mm socket
- Ratchet 3/8"
- Extension set 3/8"
- Trim clip remover
- Flat-blade screwdriver
- Torque wrench 1/2"
- Flashlight
- Mechanic gloves
- Safety glasses
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Serpentine belt - Qty: 1
- Serpentine belt tensioner (optional, if noisy or weak) - Qty: 1
- Idler pulley (optional, if noisy) - Qty: 1
- Plastic push clips (splash shield, optional) - Qty: 2-6
📋 Before You Begin
- Park on level ground, shift to Park, and set the parking brake.
- Chock the rear wheels using wheel chocks.
- Open the hood and locate 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 removal.
- Pro tip: Lay the new belt next to the old one.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Raise the right-front corner and remove the wheel
- Use a lug nut socket 22mm and breaker bar 1/2" to slightly loosen the right-front lug nuts (do not remove yet).
- Lift the right-front using a floor jack, then support with jack stands.
- Remove the lug nuts with the lug nut socket 22mm and take the wheel off.
- Reinstall later: Torque to 190 Nm (140 ft-lbs) using a torque wrench 1/2".
Step 2: Remove the right-front splash shield (inner fender access panel)
- Use a trim clip remover and flat-blade screwdriver to remove the plastic push clips/screws holding the access panel.
- Peel the panel back to expose the belt area.
- Pro tip: Put clips in a cup immediately.
Step 3: Relieve belt tension
- Find the belt tensioner (spring-loaded arm with a pulley).
- Install a 15mm socket on a ratchet 3/8" (or use a serpentine belt tool (specialty) for more leverage).
- Rotate the tensioner to relieve tension (it will be stiff; this is normal).
- Definition: The tensioner is a spring-loaded part that keeps the belt tight automatically.
Step 4: Remove the old belt
- While holding the tensioner released with the 15mm socket, slide the belt off one easy-to-reach pulley (usually the smooth idler or alternator).
- Slowly let the tensioner return to rest (do not let it snap back).
- Remove the belt from the remaining pulleys by hand.
Step 5: Inspect pulleys and tensioner before installing the new belt
- Use a flashlight and spin each pulley by hand. It should spin smoothly and quietly.
- Check for wobble, roughness, or grinding noises (these mean a pulley/tensioner may be failing).
- Look for oil/coolant contamination on pulleys; belt life drops fast if fluids are leaking.
Step 6: Route the new belt correctly
- Route the new belt around the pulleys following the under-hood routing diagram.
- Make sure the ribbed side of the belt sits in ribbed pulleys, and the smooth side rides on smooth pulleys.
- Use a flashlight to confirm every rib is seated in the grooves (especially the alternator and crank pulleys).
Step 7: Apply tension and finish installation
- Use the 15mm socket with the ratchet 3/8" (or serpentine belt tool (specialty)) to rotate the tensioner again.
- Slip the belt onto the last pulley.
- Slowly release the tensioner so it takes up belt slack.
- Recheck routing one more time; one wrong pulley will shred the belt quickly.
Step 8: Reinstall splash shield and wheel
- Reinstall the access panel using the trim clip remover and flat-blade screwdriver as needed for the clips.
- Install the wheel and hand-thread lug nuts.
- Lower the vehicle off the jack stands using the floor jack.
- Tighten lug nuts in a star pattern: Torque to 190 Nm (140 ft-lbs) using a torque wrench 1/2".
✅ After Repair
- Start the engine and let it idle while you watch the belt from a safe distance (hands/tools clear).
- Listen for chirping/squealing; if present, shut off and recheck routing and seating in grooves.
- Turn on A/C and headlights; belt should run smoothly without flutter.
- After a short drive, do a quick recheck through the wheel well to confirm the belt is centered on every pulley.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $180-$350 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $35-$85 (parts only)
You Save: $145-$265 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 0.8-1.2 hours.
🎯 Ready to get started?
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