How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2014-2015 Hyundai Tucson 2.0L (Engine: Inline 4 2.0L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, parts, coolant bleeding, torque specs, and safety tips for 2014, 2015
How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2014-2015 Hyundai Tucson 2.0L (Engine: Inline 4 2.0L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, parts, coolant bleeding, torque specs, and safety tips for 2014, 2015
🔧 Tucson - Water Pump Replacement
This repair replaces the engine water pump, which circulates coolant through your Tucson’s 2.0L engine and radiator. A failing water pump can cause coolant leaks, overheating, bearing noise, or poor heater performance.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 3-5 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Work only on a completely cool engine. Hot coolant can cause serious burns.
- ⚠️ Disconnect the negative battery cable before working near the drive belt and pulleys.
- ⚠️ Support your Tucson securely with jack stands if you raise it. Never rely on a jack alone.
- ⚠️ Keep coolant away from pets and children. Engine coolant is poisonous.
- ⚠️ Do not run the engine with the belt removed.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- 10mm socket
- 12mm socket
- 14mm socket
- 17mm socket
- 3/8-inch ratchet
- 3/8-inch extension set
- 3/8-inch torque wrench
- 14mm box-end wrench
- Flat-blade screwdriver
- Plastic trim clip remover
- Drain pan 2-gallon minimum
- Gasket scraper plastic
- Brake cleaner spray
- Shop towels
- Funnel spill-free coolant fill kit (specialty)
- 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 O-ring - Qty: 1
- Engine coolant compatible with Hyundai long-life coolant - Qty: 1-2 gallons
- Serpentine drive belt - Qty: 1
📋 Before You Begin
- 🚗 Park your Tucson on level ground and let the engine cool fully.
- 🧱 Place wheel chocks behind the rear wheels.
- 🔋 Use a 10mm socket to disconnect the negative battery cable.
- 🧊 Open the coolant reservoir cap only after the engine is cool.
- 🧰 A serpentine belt is the long rubber belt that turns accessories like the alternator and water pump.
- 🧰 A torque wrench is a tool that tightens bolts to an exact tightness so parts seal correctly.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Raise and Secure the Front
- Use wheel chocks to secure the rear wheels.
- Use a floor jack rated 2-ton minimum to lift the front of your Tucson at the front subframe lift point.
- Place jack stands rated 2-ton minimum under the front pinch weld or approved support points.
- Gently lower the vehicle onto the jack stands.
- Shake lightly to confirm stability.
Step 2: Remove the Lower Engine Splash Shield
- Use a 10mm socket to remove the splash shield bolts.
- Use a plastic trim clip remover to release any plastic push clips.
- Set the shield and hardware aside in order.
Step 3: Drain the Coolant
- Place a drain pan 2-gallon minimum under the radiator drain area.
- Use a flat-blade screwdriver to carefully open the radiator drain plug if equipped.
- If the drain plug is hard to access, use pliers by hand only if needed, but do not force it.
- Allow the coolant to drain fully.
- Close the radiator drain plug snugly by hand, then lightly tighten with the flat-blade screwdriver if applicable.
- Do not overtighten plastic drains.
Step 4: Remove the Right Front Wheel Area Access Panel
- Use a 21mm lug wrench if wheel removal is needed for extra room.
- Use a 10mm socket and plastic trim clip remover to loosen the right front inner fender access panel.
- Move the liner enough to reach the belt and pulley area.
Step 5: Relieve Serpentine Belt Tension
- Use a 14mm box-end wrench on the belt tensioner.
- Rotate the tensioner slowly to release belt tension.
- Slide the serpentine belt off the water pump pulley first.
- Release the tensioner slowly.
- Remove the belt from the remaining pulleys.
- Take a belt routing photo first.
Step 6: Remove the Water Pump Pulley
- Use a 10mm socket to remove the water pump pulley bolts.
- If the pulley spins, hold light tension on the belt by hand before fully removing the belt, or use a strap wrench if available.
- Remove the pulley from the water pump hub.
Step 7: Remove Components Blocking the Water Pump
- Use a 10mm socket to remove any small brackets or covers blocking pump access.
- Use a 12mm socket to move nearby accessory brackets only if they block the pump bolts.
- Do not disconnect A/C refrigerant lines.
- Support any moved bracket so it does not pull on wiring or hoses.
Step 8: Remove the Water Pump
- Place shop towels below the water pump area.
- Use a 10mm socket and 12mm socket to remove the water pump mounting bolts.
- Note bolt length and location as each bolt comes out.
- Gently tap the pump by hand to break the gasket seal.
- Remove the water pump from the engine.
- Expect some coolant to spill into the drain pan.
Step 9: Clean the Mounting Surface
- Use a plastic gasket scraper to remove old gasket material from the engine surface.
- Use brake cleaner spray on a shop towel to wipe the surface clean.
- Do not gouge or scratch the aluminum surface.
- Make sure no debris falls into the coolant passages.
- Clean surface equals good seal.
Step 10: Install the New Water Pump
- Install the new water pump gasket or O-ring onto the new water pump.
- Position the new pump against the engine by hand.
- Start all bolts by hand to avoid cross-threading.
- Use a 10mm socket and 12mm socket to snug the bolts evenly in a crisscross pattern.
- Use a 3/8-inch torque wrench to tighten the water pump bolts to Torque to 9-12 Nm (80-106 in-lbs).
- If larger bracket bolts were removed, use a 12mm socket or 14mm socket and tighten to Torque to 20-27 Nm (15-20 ft-lbs).
Step 11: Reinstall the Water Pump Pulley
- Place the pulley onto the water pump hub.
- Start the pulley bolts by hand.
- Use a 10mm socket to snug the pulley bolts evenly.
- Use a 3/8-inch torque wrench to tighten the pulley bolts to Torque to 9-12 Nm (80-106 in-lbs).
Step 12: Install the Serpentine Belt
- Route the new serpentine belt around the pulleys using your photo as a guide.
- Use a 14mm box-end wrench to rotate the belt tensioner.
- Slip the belt over the final pulley.
- Slowly release the tensioner.
- Check that the belt ribs sit fully in every pulley groove.
- Misaligned belts shred quickly.
Step 13: Reinstall Access Panels and Splash Shield
- Use a plastic trim clip remover to reinstall the inner fender clips.
- Use a 10mm socket to reinstall the inner fender and lower splash shield bolts.
- If the wheel was removed, use the 21mm lug wrench to reinstall lug nuts by hand first.
- Lower the vehicle with the floor jack.
- Use a torque wrench and 21mm socket to tighten wheel lug nuts to Torque to 88-108 Nm (65-80 ft-lbs).
Step 14: Refill the Cooling System
- Install the funnel spill-free coolant fill kit on the radiator or reservoir fill neck as applicable.
- Pour Hyundai-compatible long-life coolant slowly into the system.
- Fill until the coolant level stays steady.
- Reconnect the negative battery cable with a 10mm socket and tighten snugly.
Step 15: Bleed Air from the Cooling System
- Start the engine and set the heater to full hot with the fan on low.
- Let the engine idle while watching the coolant level in the spill-free funnel.
- Add coolant as air bubbles come out.
- When the upper radiator hose gets warm, the thermostat has opened.
- A thermostat is a temperature valve that controls coolant flow through the radiator.
- Watch the temperature gauge. Shut the engine off if it rises above normal.
- Once bubbling slows and heat blows warm, turn the engine off.
- Allow the engine to cool, then top off the reservoir to the “FULL” mark.
✅ After Repair
- ✅ Check around the water pump for leaks with the engine idling.
- ✅ Verify the serpentine belt tracks straight and does not squeal.
- ✅ Take a short test drive while watching the temperature gauge.
- ✅ Let the engine cool completely, then recheck the coolant reservoir level.
- ✅ Recheck for drips under your Tucson after the first drive.
- ✅ Dispose of old coolant at a proper recycling center or auto parts store.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $450-$750 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $90-$220 (parts only)
You Save: $360-$530 by doing it yourself!
Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 2.5-4 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.















