How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2016-2019 Jeep Grand Cherokee 5.7L HEMI (Engine: V8 5.7L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, parts, coolant bleeding, torque specs, and safety tips for 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
How to Replace the Water Pump on a 2016-2019 Jeep Grand Cherokee 5.7L HEMI (Engine: V8 5.7L)
Step-by-step DIY guide with tools, parts, coolant bleeding, torque specs, and safety tips for 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
🔧 Grand Cherokee - Water Pump Replacement
This repair replaces the water pump on your Grand Cherokee’s 5.7L HEMI engine. The water pump moves coolant through the engine and radiator, so a leak, bearing noise, wobbling pulley, or overheating concern means it should be replaced promptly.
Difficulty Level: Intermediate | Estimated Time: 2.5-4 hours
⚠️ Safety & Precautions
- ⚠️ Let the engine cool fully before opening the cooling system. Hot coolant can spray out and burn you.
- ⚠️ Disconnect the negative battery cable before working around the belt, pulleys, and cooling fan.
- ⚠️ Coolant is poisonous. Keep it away from children and animals, and catch all drained coolant in a pan.
- ⚠️ If you lift the front of your Grand Cherokee, support it with jack stands. Never work under a vehicle held only by a jack.
- ⚠️ Use the correct OAT coolant. Do not mix coolant types.
🔧 Required Tools
You'll need the following tools for this repair:
- 3/8-inch drive ratchet
- 1/2-inch drive breaker bar
- 8mm socket
- 10mm socket
- 13mm socket
- 15mm socket
- 16mm socket
- 3/8-inch drive extension set
- Serpentine belt tool (specialty)
- Torque wrench 10-80 ft-lbs
- Torque wrench 20-250 in-lbs
- Flat-head screwdriver
- Hose clamp pliers
- Plastic trim clip removal tool
- Coolant drain pan 3-gallon minimum
- Plastic gasket scraper
- Brake cleaner aerosol
- Shop towels
- Spill-free coolant funnel kit (specialty)
- Floor jack rated 3-ton minimum
- Jack stands rated 3-ton minimum
- Nitrile gloves
- Safety glasses
🔩 Required Parts
HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:
- Engine water pump - Qty: 1
- Water pump gasket - Qty: 1
- Thermostat housing gasket or O-ring - Qty: 1
- OAT 50/50 premix coolant - Qty: 2 gallons
- Serpentine belt - Qty: 1
- Radiator hose clamp - Qty: As needed
📋 Before You Begin
- 🚗 Park your Grand Cherokee on level ground, shift to Park, and apply the parking brake.
- ❄️ Wait until the engine is completely cold before removing the coolant cap.
- 🔋 Use a 10mm socket to disconnect the negative battery cable.
- 🧰 A serpentine belt tool is a long, thin wrench that moves the belt tensioner so the belt can come off safely.
- 🧰 A spill-free coolant funnel holds extra coolant above the fill point and helps trapped air escape while refilling.
- ♻️ Have a sealed container ready for old coolant so it can be recycled properly.
🔨 Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these steps in order:
Step 1: Remove the Engine Cover and Air Intake Duct
- Lift the plastic engine cover straight up by hand and set it aside.
- Use an 8mm socket or flat-head screwdriver to loosen the air intake duct clamps.
- Remove the intake duct by hand and place it away from the work area.
- Take photos before removing parts.
Step 2: Drain the Coolant
- Put on safety glasses and nitrile gloves.
- Place a 3-gallon coolant drain pan under the radiator drain area.
- Slowly remove the coolant reservoir cap by hand only when the engine is cold.
- Open the radiator drain petcock by hand or with pliers if accessible.
- If the drain is not accessible, use hose clamp pliers to loosen the lower radiator hose clamp, then carefully slide the hose back enough to drain coolant.
- Close the drain petcock or reinstall the lower radiator hose after draining.
Step 3: Create Front Access
- Use a plastic trim clip removal tool to remove upper radiator cover clips if they block access.
- Use a 10mm socket to remove any upper cover or shroud bolts blocking the water pump area.
- Move the cover aside carefully so the plastic tabs do not break.
Step 4: Remove the Serpentine Belt
- Find the belt routing decal under the hood, or take a clear photo of the belt path.
- Install the serpentine belt tool or 1/2-inch breaker bar onto the belt tensioner.
- Rotate the tensioner clockwise to remove tension from the belt.
- Slide the belt off the water pump pulley by hand.
- Slowly release the tensioner, then remove the belt from the engine bay.
- Release the tensioner slowly.
Step 5: Remove Coolant Hoses from the Pump
- Use hose clamp pliers to squeeze the spring clamp on each hose attached to the water pump.
- Slide each clamp back along the hose.
- Twist each hose by hand to loosen it, then pull it off the water pump.
- Use a flat-head screwdriver only if the hose is stuck, and do not cut or gouge the hose.
Step 6: Remove the Thermostat Housing if Needed
- Use a 13mm socket to remove the thermostat housing bolts if the housing must be transferred to the new pump.
- Pull the thermostat housing away from the water pump by hand.
- Remove and discard the old thermostat housing gasket or O-ring.
Step 7: Remove the Water Pump Pulley
- Use a 13mm socket to loosen the water pump pulley bolts.
- If the pulley spins, hold it carefully by hand with gloves while loosening the bolts.
- Remove the pulley bolts and water pump pulley.
Step 8: Remove the Old Water Pump
- Use a 10mm socket and 13mm socket to remove the water pump mounting bolts.
- Lay the bolts out in the same pattern they came out. Some bolts may be different lengths.
- Pull the water pump straight off the engine.
- If it is stuck, tap the pump body lightly with the handle of a ratchet. Do not pry hard against the aluminum cover.
- Let remaining coolant drain into the drain pan.
Step 9: Clean the Sealing Surface
- Use a plastic gasket scraper to remove old gasket material from the engine front cover.
- Spray brake cleaner onto a shop towel, then wipe the sealing surface clean.
- Do not spray heavily into open coolant passages.
- Do not use a metal scraper because it can scratch the aluminum surface.
Step 10: Install the New Water Pump
- Place the new water pump gasket onto the new water pump.
- Position the pump against the engine by hand.
- Start all water pump bolts by hand before tightening any of them.
- Use a 10mm socket and 13mm socket to snug the bolts evenly in a crisscross pattern.
- Use a torque wrench to tighten the water pump bolts to Torque to 28 Nm (21 ft-lbs).
Step 11: Reinstall the Thermostat Housing
- Install the new thermostat housing gasket or O-ring by hand.
- Position the thermostat housing on the water pump.
- Start the bolts by hand.
- Use a 13mm socket to snug the bolts.
- Use an inch-pound torque wrench to tighten the thermostat housing bolts to Torque to 12 Nm (106 in-lbs).
Step 12: Reinstall the Water Pump Pulley
- Place the pulley onto the water pump hub by hand.
- Start the pulley bolts by hand.
- Use a 13mm socket to snug the pulley bolts evenly.
- Use a torque wrench to tighten the pulley bolts to Torque to 28 Nm (21 ft-lbs).
Step 13: Reconnect the Coolant Hoses
- Push each hose fully onto its fitting by hand.
- Use hose clamp pliers to move each clamp back to its original position.
- Make sure each clamp sits behind the raised bead on the fitting.
Step 14: Install the Serpentine Belt
- Route the serpentine belt around the pulleys using the belt routing decal or your photo.
- Use the serpentine belt tool or 1/2-inch breaker bar to rotate the tensioner clockwise.
- Slip the belt over the final pulley by hand.
- Slowly release the tensioner.
- Check every pulley to make sure the belt ribs sit fully in the grooves.
- Check belt alignment twice.
Step 15: Reinstall Covers and Intake Duct
- Use a 10mm socket to reinstall any upper cover or shroud bolts.
- Use the plastic trim clip removal tool or your fingers to reinstall plastic push clips.
- Reinstall the air intake duct by hand.
- Use an 8mm socket or flat-head screwdriver to tighten the duct clamps.
- Push the engine cover back into place by hand.
Step 16: Refill and Bleed the Cooling System
- Reconnect the negative battery cable using a 10mm socket.
- Install the spill-free coolant funnel kit at the coolant fill point.
- Slowly add OAT 50/50 premix coolant.
- Set the cabin heat to full hot and blower to low.
- Start the engine and let it idle.
- Add coolant as the level drops in the funnel.
- Watch for air bubbles coming out through the funnel.
- When the upper radiator hose gets hot, the thermostat has opened. Add coolant again if the level drops.
- Keep idling until bubbles stop and the heater blows hot air.
Step 17: Final Leak Check
- Use a flashlight to inspect the water pump gasket, thermostat housing, hose ends, and radiator drain area.
- Shut the engine off and let it cool completely.
- Remove the spill-free funnel kit and install the coolant cap by hand.
- Top off the coolant reservoir to the correct level after the engine cools.
✅ After Repair
- ✅ Start your Grand Cherokee and let it reach normal operating temperature.
- ✅ Confirm the temperature gauge stays steady near normal.
- ✅ Confirm the cabin heater blows hot air.
- ✅ Test drive for 10-15 minutes, then inspect for leaks again.
- ✅ Recheck coolant level after the next full cool-down cycle.
- ✅ If the engine overheats, stop driving immediately and recheck coolant level, trapped air, and belt routing.
💰 DIY vs Shop Cost
Shop Cost: $650-$1,050 (parts + labor)
DIY Cost: $180-$380 (parts only)
You Save: $470-$670 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?
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