How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2016 Jeep Renegade (DIY Guide)
Step-by-step instructions with required tools/parts, belt routing tips, safety checks, and torque specs for 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
How to Replace the Serpentine Belt on a 2016 Jeep Renegade (DIY Guide)
Step-by-step instructions with required tools/parts, belt routing tips, safety checks, and torque specs for 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
🔧 Renegade - Serpentine Belt Replacement
The serpentine belt drives accessories like the alternator and A/C compressor. Replacing it on your Renegade involves relieving tension with the automatic belt tensioner, swapping the belt, then confirming correct routing and alignment on every pulley.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 0.8-1.5 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Work on a cold engine to avoid burns.
- ⚠️ Keep fingers and tools away from pulleys at all times.
- ⚠️ Support the vehicle securely before working underneath.
- ⚠️ Disconnect the negative battery cable if your tools will be near the alternator power stud.
- ⚠️ Do not start the engine until the belt is fully seated on every pulley.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- Safety glasses
- Mechanic gloves
- Wheel chocks
- Floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum)
- Jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum)
- Lug wrench 19mm
- Trim clip removal tool
- Flat-blade screwdriver
- Ratchet 3/8" drive
- Serpentine belt tool 3/8" drive (specialty)
- Socket set metric (8mm, 10mm)
- Torque wrench 3/8" drive (10-60 Nm range)
- Flashlight
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Serpentine belt - Qty: 1
- Accessory drive belt tensioner - Qty: 1 Optional if noisy/weak
- Belt idler pulley - Qty: 1 Optional if noisy
- Fender liner push clips - Qty: 5-10 Optional if any break
📋 Before You Begin
- Park on level ground, shift to Park, and set the parking brake.
- Place wheel chocks behind the rear wheels.
- Open the hood and locate the belt routing diagram (often on a sticker near the radiator support or under-hood area). If missing, take a clear photo/draw a sketch before removing the belt.
- If you’ll be working close to the alternator electrical terminal, disconnect the negative battery cable using a 10mm socket.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Raise and secure the right-front corner
- Use wheel chocks to secure the vehicle.
- Loosen the right-front wheel lug nuts slightly using a 19mm lug wrench.
- Lift the right-front corner with a floor jack and set it down on jack stands.
- Remove the wheel with the 19mm lug wrench.
Step 2: Remove the right front inner fender liner access
- Use a trim clip removal tool and flat-blade screwdriver to remove the plastic push-clips/screws from the front portion of the right inner fender liner.
- Peel the liner back enough to access the belt and pulleys. Go slow to avoid tearing the liner.
Step 3: Locate the belt tensioner and relieve tension
- Identify the automatic belt tensioner (a spring-loaded arm with a pulley). The square drive hole is for a ratchet.
- Insert a 3/8" drive serpentine belt tool or 3/8" ratchet into the tensioner square drive.
- Rotate the tensioner smoothly to relieve belt tension. Hold it firmly; it’s spring-loaded.
Step 4: Remove the old belt
- While holding the tensioner released with the serpentine belt tool, slip the belt off the easiest-to-reach smooth pulley (often the idler or alternator pulley).
- Slowly let the tensioner return to its rest position.
- Remove the belt from the remaining pulleys and pull it out through the wheel well opening.
Step 5: Inspect pulleys, tensioner, and belt path
- Spin each pulley by hand and listen/feel for grinding or wobble.
- Check the tensioner pulley for roughness and the tensioner arm for weak spring action.
- If any pulley is noisy or wobbly, replace the bad component before installing the new belt.
Step 6: Route the new belt
- Compare the new belt to the old one for length and rib count.
- Route the new belt around the pulleys following the under-hood routing diagram (or your photo).
- Make sure the ribbed side sits fully in the grooves of ribbed pulleys, and the smooth side rides on smooth pulleys.
Step 7: Apply tension and seat the belt
- Use the 3/8" drive serpentine belt tool to rotate the tensioner and create slack.
- Slip the belt onto the last pulley, then slowly release the tensioner.
- Visually confirm the belt is centered on every pulley and not hanging off an edge.
Step 8: Reinstall fender liner and wheel
- Reposition the liner and install the clips/screws using the trim clip removal tool and flat-blade screwdriver.
- Reinstall the wheel and snug lug nuts with the 19mm lug wrench.
- Lower the vehicle from the jack stands using the floor jack.
- Tighten lug nuts in a star pattern using a torque wrench: Torque to 135 Nm (100 ft-lbs).
Step 9: Reconnect battery (if disconnected) and final check
- Reconnect the negative battery cable using a 10mm socket.
- Double-check belt routing one last time with the flashlight.
✅ After Repair
- Start the engine and watch the belt for 30-60 seconds. It should run smooth with no wandering.
- Listen for squealing or chirping. If present, shut off and re-check belt seating on all grooves.
- Turn A/C on, headlights on, and verify no unusual noises under load.
- After a short test drive, re-check for any loose liner clips or rubbing.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $170-$320 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $30-$80 (parts only)
You Save: $140-$240 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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