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Trunk lid and compartment parts keep your rear storage area accessible, secure, and weathertight. Lift supports are by far the most common replacement item — the gas-charged struts that hold your trunk or deck lid open typically last 50,000–80,000 miles or 7–10 years before the nitrogen charge depletes and the lid starts drooping. Lock components, including actuator motors and latch assemblies, wear out from repeated cycling or corrosion, especially on vehicles in high-humidity climates. Trunk lid seals fail gradually, letting in water, road noise, and exhaust fumes. When buying lift supports, match the compressed and extended length exactly and verify the Newton-force rating (typically 100–300N depending on lid weight) — an undersized strut won't hold the lid up, an oversized one can stress the hinges. OEM fitment is tightest on lock assemblies and actuator motors; aftermarket lift supports from brands like Stabilus, Sachs, and StrongArm are widely trusted alternatives.
Signs you need replacement
- Trunk lid falls, sags, or won't stay open — the lift supports have lost pressure. A lid that holds briefly then slowly drops confirms a weak strut rather than a hinge problem.
- Trunk won't release from the key fob or interior button — the actuator motor has failed or seized. You can usually still open it manually via the key cylinder while diagnosing the electrical side.
- Key turns but the trunk won't unlatch or stays stuck — the lock cylinder or latch mechanism is worn, corroded, or misaligned, and continuing to force it can break the key.
- Water pooling inside the trunk, damp carpet, or musty smell — the trunk lid seal has cracked, flattened, or pulled away from the channel, allowing rain intrusion, especially at corners where the seal is most stressed.
- Rattling or clunking from the rear when driving over bumps — a failed lift support or loose latch hardware causes the lid to move in its channel; also check deck lid handle fasteners if the noise is isolated to that area.
- Trunk lid handle feels loose, spins freely, or snapped off — handle hardware corrodes or the retaining clips break over time, requiring handle replacement before the latch mechanism itself is damaged.
Frequently asked questions
- How often do trunk lift supports need to be replaced? Most lift supports last 7–10 years or 50,000–80,000 miles under normal use. UV exposure and temperature extremes accelerate wear — vehicles in hot climates or parked outdoors regularly often see failure closer to the 5–7 year mark. Replace both supports at the same time even if only one has failed.
- Are aftermarket trunk lift supports as good as OEM? For lift supports, yes — brands like Stabilus (OEM supplier to many manufacturers), Sachs, and StrongArm meet or exceed OEM specs in most applications. For actuator motors and lock assemblies, OEM or OEM-equivalent parts are worth the premium, as connector pinouts and mounting points vary enough between brands to cause fitment headaches.
- What does trunk lift support replacement cost, and is it a DIY job? Parts typically run $15–$60 per strut depending on vehicle; a pair from a reputable brand usually lands between $25–$90 total. Replacement is straightforward on most vehicles — prop the lid open, unclip or unscrew the old strut end fittings, and snap the new ones in. Most jobs take under 30 minutes with no special tools.















































