More Information
Control cables connect your interior release handles to the hood latch, tailgate latch, trunk lid, and fuel filler door — a simple mechanical link that takes thousands of cycles over the life of a vehicle. They fail in predictable ways: the inner wire frays or snaps, the outer conduit kinks or corrodes, or the plastic end fittings crack from age and heat cycles. Most failures happen after 10–15 years or 100,000+ miles, though vehicles in rust-belt climates or with hood releases that rarely get used tend to go sooner. Hood release cables account for the vast majority of replacements here (203 of 219 products), so confirm your year, make, model, and trim before ordering — routing paths and end-fitting geometry vary significantly even within the same nameplate. OEM cables match original routing and hardware exactly; quality aftermarket options from brands like Dorman are typically equivalent for daily drivers and cost 20–40% less.
Signs you need replacement
- Hood release handle pulls back but the hood doesn't pop — the inner wire has likely snapped or detached from the latch end, a common failure on high-mileage vehicles where the cable has never been replaced.
- Release handle feels unusually stiff or requires excessive force — the inner wire is fraying or the conduit is kinked, creating friction. Continuing to force it often leads to a complete snap at the worst possible time.
- Tailgate won't release from the cab switch or exterior handle — on trucks and SUVs, the tailgate release cable runs through the latch mechanism and is prone to corrosion at the latch fitting, especially in northern climates.
- Fuel filler door or trunk lid won't open via the interior lever — the cable end has pulled free of the release lever or the conduit has collapsed, common on older vehicles where the cable housing has become brittle.
- Visible rust, kinking, or fraying on the cable where it exits the firewall or passes through a grommet — surface corrosion on the outer conduit accelerates inner wire wear and is a reliable sign replacement is coming soon.
Frequently asked questions
- Is there a set replacement interval for hood and trunk release cables? There's no fixed mileage interval — these cables are replaced on failure or condition, not schedule. Realistically, expect 10–15 years on most vehicles before wear or corrosion becomes an issue. Inspect the cable and conduit for fraying, kinking, or rust any time you're working near the firewall or latch area.
- Should I buy OEM or aftermarket for a hood release cable? For most daily drivers, a quality aftermarket cable — Dorman is the dominant supplier here — works fine and costs $15–$40 versus $40–$90+ for dealer OEM. If your vehicle is still under warranty, has a complex routing path, or you've had fitment issues with aftermarket parts before, OEM is the safer call. Always verify the part number against your VIN.
- How difficult is a hood release cable replacement, and what else should I replace at the same time? Difficulty is moderate — typically 1–2 hours for a DIYer with basic hand tools. The tricky part is routing the new cable through the firewall grommet and threading it to the latch. While you're in there, inspect the hood latch, latch striker, and release handle for wear. If the handle feels sloppy, replace it at the same time — labor overlap makes it cheap to do together.















































