How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2013-2016 Ford Escape (Engine: Inline 4 2.0L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, parts, coolant bleeding tips, and torque specs for 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2013-2016 Ford Escape (Engine: Inline 4 2.0L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, parts, coolant bleeding tips, and torque specs for 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
🔧 Escape - Water Pump Replacement
Replacing the water pump on your Escape means draining the coolant, removing the accessory drive belt, removing the water pump pulley and pump, then installing a new pump with a fresh gasket. The water pump circulates coolant through the engine and radiator; if it leaks or has bearing play, the engine can overheat quickly.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 3-5 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Work only on a completely cool engine. Hot coolant can cause serious burns.
- 🧤 Wear safety glasses and gloves when draining coolant.
- 🚫 Keep coolant away from pets and children. It is toxic and tastes sweet.
- 🔋 Disconnect the negative battery cable before working near the accessory belt area.
- 🌱 Collect old coolant in a drain pan and dispose of it properly according to local rules.
- ⚙️ Do not start the engine with the accessory belt removed.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- 8mm socket
- 10mm socket
- 13mm socket
- 15mm wrench
- 3/8-inch drive ratchet
- 3/8-inch drive extension set
- Torque wrench, 5-50 Nm range
- Flat-blade screwdriver
- Plastic trim clip remover
- Hose clamp pliers
- Drain pan, 2-gallon minimum
- Cooling system vacuum fill tool (specialty)
- Funnel with spill-free coolant adapter (specialty)
- Gasket scraper, plastic
- Shop towels
- Floor jack, rated 2-ton minimum
- Jack stands, rated 2-ton minimum
- Wheel chocks
- Nitrile gloves
- Safety glasses
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Engine water pump - Qty: 1
- Water pump gasket or seal - Qty: 1
- Engine coolant, Ford-approved orange or compatible coolant - Qty: 2 gallons premixed
- Accessory drive belt - Qty: 1
📋 Before You Begin
- 🅿️ Park your Escape on level ground, set the parking brake, and chock the rear wheels.
- ❄️ Let the engine cool fully before opening the coolant reservoir cap.
- 🔋 Use a 10mm socket to disconnect the negative battery cable.
- 📸 Take a photo of the accessory belt routing before removal. This helps during reinstallation.
- 🛞 Raise the front passenger side with a floor jack and support it securely with a jack stand.
- 🧰 A torque wrench tightens bolts to an exact force so small aluminum engine parts are not damaged.
- 🧪 A vacuum fill tool uses compressed air to pull air from the cooling system before adding coolant; it helps prevent air pockets.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Remove the Engine Appearance Cover
- Use your hands to pull the engine cover upward from its rubber mounting points.
- Set the cover aside in a safe place.
- Lift straight up gently.
Step 2: Disconnect the Battery
- Use a 10mm socket to loosen the negative battery cable clamp.
- Move the cable away from the battery post so it cannot spring back and touch.
Step 3: Raise and Support the Vehicle
- Place wheel chocks behind the rear wheels.
- Use a floor jack, rated 2-ton minimum, to lift the front passenger side at the proper front jacking point.
- Place a jack stand, rated 2-ton minimum, under the passenger-side front support point.
- Lower the vehicle gently onto the jack stand.
- Keep the floor jack lightly touching the jacking point as a backup.
Step 4: Remove the Passenger-Side Lower Splash Shield
- Use a 8mm socket to remove the lower splash shield fasteners.
- Use a plastic trim clip remover to release any plastic push clips.
- Remove the splash shield and set it aside.
Step 5: Drain the Coolant
- Place a drain pan, 2-gallon minimum, under the radiator drain area.
- Slowly remove the coolant reservoir cap by hand to release any remaining pressure.
- Use a flat-blade screwdriver to open the radiator drain petcock if equipped.
- If the drain petcock is not easy to access, use hose clamp pliers to loosen the lower radiator hose clamp and carefully slide the hose back just enough to drain coolant.
- Let the coolant drain fully into the pan.
- Reinstall the lower hose and clamp if removed.
- Go slow to avoid spills.
Step 6: Remove the Accessory Drive Belt
- Look at your belt routing photo before removing the belt.
- Use a 15mm wrench on the belt tensioner. The tensioner is the spring-loaded arm that keeps the belt tight.
- Rotate the tensioner to release belt tension.
- Slide the belt off one pulley, then slowly release the tensioner.
- Remove the belt from the engine bay.
- Replace the belt if it has cracks, glazing, missing ribs, or coolant contamination.
Step 7: Remove the Water Pump Pulley
- Use a 10mm socket to loosen the water pump pulley bolts.
- If the pulley spins, hold it steady by hand with gloves or use the old belt wrapped around the pulley for grip.
- Remove the pulley bolts and remove the pulley.
- Keep the bolts together so they go back in the same location.
Step 8: Remove the Water Pump
- Place shop towels below the pump area to catch remaining coolant.
- Use a 8mm socket or 10mm socket, depending on bolt head size, to remove the water pump mounting bolts.
- Note bolt locations as you remove them. Some bolts may be different lengths.
- Gently pull the water pump away from the engine.
- If it sticks, tap lightly by hand. Do not pry hard against the aluminum engine surface.
Step 9: Clean the Sealing Surface
- Use a plastic gasket scraper to clean the engine-side sealing surface.
- Wipe the area with shop towels until it is clean and dry.
- Do not gouge or scratch the aluminum surface.
- Make sure no old gasket material falls into the coolant passage.
- Clean surface prevents leaks.
Step 10: Install the New Water Pump
- Position the new water pump gasket or seal on the new water pump.
- Install the pump onto the engine by hand.
- Start all water pump bolts by hand first to avoid cross-threading.
- Use a 8mm socket or 10mm socket to snug the bolts evenly in a crisscross pattern.
- Use a torque wrench to tighten the water pump bolts evenly to Torque to 10 Nm (89 in-lbs).
Step 11: Reinstall the Water Pump Pulley
- Place the pulley onto the new water pump.
- Start the pulley bolts by hand.
- Use a 10mm socket to snug the pulley bolts.
- Use a torque wrench to tighten the pulley bolts to Torque to 25 Nm (18 ft-lbs).
Step 12: Reinstall the Accessory Drive Belt
- Route the accessory belt around the pulleys using your belt routing photo.
- Use a 15mm wrench to rotate the belt tensioner and create slack.
- Slide the belt over the final pulley.
- Slowly release the tensioner.
- Check that every belt rib sits fully inside every pulley groove.
- Misrouted belts shred quickly.
Step 13: Reinstall the Splash Shield
- Position the passenger-side lower splash shield back in place.
- Use a plastic trim clip remover to reinstall any push clips by hand.
- Use a 8mm socket to reinstall the splash shield fasteners.
- Tighten the small splash shield fasteners snugly; do not overtighten plastic fasteners.
Step 14: Lower the Vehicle
- Use the floor jack to lift the vehicle slightly off the jack stand.
- Remove the jack stand.
- Lower the vehicle slowly to the ground with the floor jack.
Step 15: Refill the Cooling System
- Best method: use a cooling system vacuum fill tool to fill the system with Ford-approved coolant.
- If using a spill-free funnel, install the funnel adapter on the coolant reservoir.
- Fill the reservoir slowly with premixed coolant until the level reaches the proper cold-fill mark.
- Squeeze the upper radiator hose by hand several times to help move trapped air.
- Do not overfill the coolant reservoir.
Step 16: Reconnect the Battery
- Place the negative battery cable back onto the battery post.
- Use a 10mm socket to tighten the clamp snugly.
- Make sure the cable does not twist or move by hand.
Step 17: Bleed Air From the Cooling System
- Start the engine and let it idle with the coolant reservoir cap off if using a spill-free funnel.
- Set the heater to full hot and the blower to low.
- Watch the coolant level and add premixed coolant as air bubbles come out.
- When the engine reaches operating temperature, check for warm air from the vents.
- Install the coolant reservoir cap once bubbling stops and the level is stable.
- Use safety glasses and keep hands clear of the belt and cooling fan.
✅ After Repair
- ✅ Let the engine idle and inspect around the water pump with a flashlight for leaks.
- 🌡️ Watch the temperature gauge. Shut the engine off immediately if it rises above normal.
- 🔥 Confirm the heater blows hot air. No heat can mean trapped air in the cooling system.
- 🚗 Take a short test drive, then recheck coolant level after the engine cools completely.
- 🔁 Recheck the water pump area and lower hose connection after the first full heat cycle.
- 🧴 Top off only with the same coolant type used during the repair.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $650-$1,050 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $120-$260 (parts only)
You Save: $530-$790 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 3-5 hours.
🎯 Ready to get started?
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