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The water pump is the heart of your engine's cooling system, circulating coolant between the engine block, radiator, and heater core. Most engine-driven pumps are belt-operated — timing belt or serpentine — and typically last 60,000–100,000 miles, though this varies by application. Failure can cause rapid overheating and serious engine damage, so replacement is often time-sensitive. Beyond the pump itself, this catalog covers pulleys, inlet tubes, housings, gasket kits, and complete assemblies — plus auxiliary and electric pumps found on turbocharged, hybrid, and modern direct-injection engines. When buying, verify whether your application uses a timing belt-driven pump (replace together with the belt service) or a serpentine-driven pump. OEM pumps are cast iron or aluminum with ceramic or carbon seals; quality aftermarket options from brands like Gates, Dayco, and GMB match OEM specs at lower cost. Always confirm bearing quality and impeller material — steel impellers outperform plastic long-term.
Signs you need replacement
- Coolant leak at the front-center of the engine — A weep hole on the pump body is designed to drip coolant when the internal seal begins to fail. A small stain may precede a full seal failure by weeks; a steady drip means replacement is overdue.
- Engine overheating at idle or in traffic — A worn impeller (especially plastic ones that crack or corrode) loses pumping efficiency at low RPMs first. If your temp gauge climbs when sitting still but recovers at highway speed, poor coolant circulation is a likely cause.
- Grinding, whining, or rumbling noise from the front of the engine — Worn or seized pump bearings produce audible noise that changes with engine speed. Grab the pulley with the engine off — any side play or rough rotation confirms bearing failure.
- Coolant contamination or rust-colored streaks near the pump — Corrosion inside the pump housing or on the impeller reduces flow and accelerates seal wear. If your coolant hasn't been flushed on schedule, internal erosion may already be compromising pump output.
- Upcoming timing belt service on an interference engine — If your engine is timing belt-driven and the pump is mounted on that belt, replace the pump at every timing belt interval regardless of symptoms. The labor overlap makes it a ~$20–$60 part that prevents a potentially engine-destroying failure.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should a water pump be replaced, and does it depend on drive type? Timing belt-driven pumps should be replaced every time you do a timing belt service — typically every 60,000–105,000 miles depending on your manufacturer's schedule. Serpentine-driven pumps don't have a fixed interval but commonly fail between 80,000–120,000 miles. Replace proactively if you're already pulling the front of the engine for another job.
- Is an OEM water pump worth the premium over aftermarket? For most passenger vehicles, a quality aftermarket pump from Gates, ACDelco, Aisin, or GMB performs comparably to OEM at 30–50% less cost. The key is avoiding no-name pumps with plastic impellers on high-temperature applications. On timing belt-driven engines, stick with kit brands like Gates or Aisin that include gaskets, bolts, and tensioners to ensure everything is correctly matched.
- What else should I replace while the water pump is out? At minimum, replace the pump gasket or O-ring — never reuse the old one. On timing belt applications, replace the belt, tensioner, idler pulley, and thermostat in the same service; labor for all of these overlaps significantly. On serpentine-driven pumps, inspect the belt, idler, and tensioner and replace anything showing wear. Budget $150–$400 for a DIY timing belt/water pump kit; shop labor for the full job typically runs $400–$900 depending on engine access.















































