How to Replace the Side View Mirrors on a 2016 Ford F-150
Step-by-step instructions with tools, parts, torque specs, and safety tips
How to Replace the Side View Mirrors on a 2016 Ford F-150
Step-by-step instructions with tools, parts, torque specs, and safety tips
🔧 Side View Mirrors - Replacement
This job replaces the complete exterior mirror assembly on your F-150. The door trim panel has to come off first, then the mirror connector and mounting nuts are removed from inside the door.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 1-2 hours per mirror
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- Disconnect the negative battery cable before unplugging any mirror connector. This helps prevent electrical faults and accidental short circuits.
- Be careful with the door trim panel clips. Pulling too hard can crack the panel or break clips.
- If your mirror has power fold, heated glass, turn signals, or blind spot warning, make sure the replacement mirror matches those features.
- Support the mirror with one hand while removing the last nut so it does not drop and damage the paint.
- Keep glass and painted surfaces protected with masking tape or a fender cover.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- 7mm socket
- 8mm socket
- Ratchet
- Small extension
- Trim panel removal tool
- Flat trim tool
- Torque wrench
- Phillips screwdriver
- Safety glasses
- Gloves
- Battery terminal wrench
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Side view mirror assembly - Qty: 1 per side replaced
- Door trim panel clip(s) - Qty: As needed
- Mirror gasket or foam seal - Qty: 1 per side replaced
- Door vapor barrier adhesive tape - Qty: As needed
📋 Before You Begin
- Park on level ground and set the parking brake.
- Lower the window on the door you are working on. This gives you room to handle the panel safely.
- Disconnect the negative battery cable before starting.
- If the mirror has heated glass, turn signals, power fold, or blind spot monitoring, verify the replacement mirror matches the original.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Remove the door trim panel
- Use a trim panel removal tool to carefully pop the trim cover pieces off the door panel.
- Use a 7mm socket to remove the screws at the handle and lower door panel areas.
- Use the trim panel removal tool to release the door panel clips around the edges.
- Lift the panel upward to unhook it from the window ledge.
- Disconnect the electrical connectors for the window switch and any other door-mounted switches.
Step 2: Peel back the water shield
- Carefully peel back the vapor barrier enough to reach the mirror wiring and mounting area.
- Keep the adhesive clean.
- If the barrier tears, reseal it later with adhesive tape.
Step 3: Disconnect the mirror connector
- Locate the mirror wiring connector inside the door.
- Press the lock tab and unplug the connector by hand.
- Do not pull on the wires.
Step 4: Remove the mirror mounting nuts
- Use an 8mm socket and ratchet with a small extension to remove the mirror nuts from inside the door.
- Hold the mirror from the outside while removing the last nut.
- Torque on installation: 8-10 Nm (71-89 in-lbs).
Step 5: Remove the mirror from the door
- Pull the mirror assembly straight away from the door.
- Remove the old gasket or foam seal if it stays on the door.
- Check the paint for trapped debris.
Step 6: Install the new mirror
- Position the new mirror assembly in the door opening.
- Start all mounting nuts by hand first.
- Use the 8mm socket to tighten the nuts evenly.
- Torque to 8-10 Nm (71-89 in-lbs).
Step 7: Reconnect wiring and reassemble the door
- Reconnect the mirror electrical connector until it clicks.
- Reinstall the vapor barrier and press the adhesive back into place.
- Reconnect the door panel electrical connectors.
- Hang the door panel on the window ledge, then press the clips back in by hand.
- Reinstall the screws with the 7mm socket.
Step 8: Test the mirror
- Reconnect the negative battery cable with the battery terminal wrench.
- Test mirror adjustment, heating, turn signal, power fold, and blind spot functions if equipped.
- Check that the door panel sits flush and the mirror is secure.
✅ After Repair
- Cycle the mirror through all movement positions and make sure it moves smoothly.
- Verify the turn signal, heating, and blind spot warning work if equipped.
- Check for wind noise on a short road test.
- Recheck mirror nut tightness if the new mirror settles after installation.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $250-$700 per mirror (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $120-$350 per mirror (parts only)
You Save: $130-$350 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 1-2 hours per mirror.
🎯 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.

















