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Body hardware, fasteners, and fittings are the small parts that hold your vehicle's exterior and interior panels, moldings, bumpers, and trim in place. They're easy to overlook until a bumper cover is flapping in the wind, a door hinge is sagging, or rattling panels won't stay put. Most plastic retainers and clips are single-use — they break on removal and need to be replaced rather than reused. Door hinge pin and bushing kits are the most labor-intensive parts in this category; expect worn hinges to cause misaligned doors that won't seal or latch correctly. When buying, OEM clips and retainers are often worth the small price premium since aftermarket equivalents can vary in material thickness and retention force. Always match part numbers by year, make, and model — a clip that looks identical may have a different shank diameter or flange width that prevents proper seating. This catalog covers 370 parts across 80+ part types.
Signs you need replacement
- Door droops, drags, or won't latch flush. A sagging door that scrapes the striker or sits low in the opening is a classic sign of worn hinge pins and bushings — the pin wears oblong and allows vertical slop in the hinge.
- Bumper cover or body molding is loose, lifting, or vibrating at highway speeds. Plastic retainers and push-pin clips break when the cover flexes or when they're exposed to heat cycles over time, leaving sections unclipped against the body.
- Interior trim panels rattle or pop when driving over bumps. Broken interior panel retainers and clips lose their grip and allow panels to flex, producing the kind of persistent rattle that's nearly impossible to track down without pulling the trim.
- Splash shields and fender liners dragging or hanging down. Undercar shield clips and fender liner retainers often shear off after contact with road debris or during careless removal at oil changes, leaving shields to scrape on the ground.
- Wind or water noise around doors or windows after a body repair. Weatherstrip fasteners and seal clips that weren't replaced during a door panel or glass R&R can leave gaps that allow air and water intrusion even when the seal itself is intact.
- Fuel door won't spring open or stays open on its own. The small torsion spring behind the fuel door fatigues with repeated use and loses tension, causing the door to either fail to pop open or fail to stay closed.
Frequently asked questions
- How do I know which specific clip or retainer fits my vehicle? Filter by year, make, and model — then cross-reference the part type. Many clips are model-specific even within the same platform; a 2015 Camry and a 2016 Camry can use different bumper retainer part numbers. When possible, match the OEM part number printed on the old clip before ordering.
- Are OEM fasteners worth it over aftermarket for body clips and retainers? For structural hardware like door hinge pin kits and hinge bolts, OEM or OEM-spec aftermarket is recommended — material grade matters. For interior panel clips, bumper retainers, and push-pins, quality aftermarket kits work well and often come in multi-packs that save money when replacing a full bumper cover's worth of clips at once.
- How much does it cost to replace door hinge pins and bushings, and is it a DIY job? Parts typically run $15–$60 per hinge kit depending on the vehicle. The job is DIY-friendly with basic tools — a pin punch, hammer, and drill — but requires supporting the door's weight throughout. Budget 1–3 hours per door. Replace pins and bushings together; worn bushings will accelerate pin wear if left in place.















































