Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

CATEGORIES

Brands

Show More Show Less

Part Location

Shape

Voltage

Size

Show More Show Less

Weight

Show More Show Less

Watts

Show More Show Less

Beam Pattern

Show More Show Less

Body Material

Lens Material

Environmental

Item Type

Show More Show Less

Current

Show More Show Less

Connector

Light Output

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 1988 Suzuki Jimny-Headlights

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Showing 40 - 78 of 87 products

1988 Suzuki Jimny headlights — purpose, fitment, and easy servicing tips

Headlights are absolutely fitted and relevant on the 1988 Suzuki Jimny (also known locally as the Sierra/SJ413). This is supported by the Suzuki SJ413/Samurai Workshop Manual (lighting system section), the Suzuki Electronic Parts Catalogue for Group 36 (Lighting), and period compliance rules such as Australian Design Rules ADR 13/00 and ADR 46/00, along with New Zealand’s Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004, all of which require compliant headlamps for on-road use. Most 1988 Jimny/Sierra variants left the factory with 7-inch round sealed-beam headlamps, some markets featured 7-inch housings with replaceable H4 halogen bulbs.

On this plucky off-roader, the headlights do more than tick a legal box. They provide safe, reliable illumination on country roads, muddy forestry tracks, and city commutes. The round 7-inch format makes parts easy to source and keeps the classic look. Whether sealed-beam or H4, a correctly aimed, healthy headlight set ensures the Jimny is seen by others and the driver can read the terrain ahead with confidence.

For servicing, owners typically replace sealed-beam units when a filament blows or when output fades. If the vehicle uses H4 housings, replace bulbs in pairs and avoid touching the glass. Access is straightforward: remove the grille if fitted, undo the retaining ring, and swap the lamp or bulb. After any replacement, re-aim the lights on level ground following the factory pattern and local rules. Many owners fit a dedicated relay harness to reduce voltage drop and protect the combination switch, paired with quality 55/60 W H4 bulbs (where applicable), this keeps the output bright while staying road-legal.

  • Check lenses for yellowing, cracks, or moisture, renew seals or the unit if needed.
  • Clean and tighten earth points, treat connectors with dielectric grease to fight corrosion.
  • Perform a voltage-drop test, consider a relay upgrade for stronger, steadier light.
  • Ensure the beam pattern suits AU/NZ right-hand-drive roads (left-dipping cutoff).
  • If adding driving lights, wire them on a separate fused circuit, they don’t replace ADR/ECE headlamps.
  • Replace lamps/bulbs in pairs to keep brightness and colour even.

Look after the Jimny’s headlights and they’ll look after night driving and trail work for years, without spoiling that iconic round-eye face.

Popular questions about 1988 Suzuki Jimny headlights

What headlight type fits a 1988 Jimny/Sierra?

Most 1988 models use 7-inch round sealed-beam units. Some trims or markets use 7-inch housings that accept H4 replaceable bulbs. For Australia and New Zealand, choose lamps with the correct right-hand-drive (left-dip) beam pattern and appropriate ADR/ECE markings.

When converting from sealed-beam to H4, pick reputable housings with proper cutoff and stick with 55/60 W bulbs for legal, reliable performance.

How can brightness be improved while staying legal?

Start with clean lenses and solid earths, then add a headlight relay harness to reduce voltage drop. With H4 setups, quality 55/60 W bulbs deliver a noticeable lift without overloading wiring. Avoid over-wattage globes that can overheat reflectors or breach regulations.

After any changes, re-aim the lights so the cutoff is crisp and not dazzling oncoming traffic.

How often should the headlights be replaced or serviced?

Replace sealed-beams when a filament fails or output looks tired. For H4 bulbs, refresh every few years or at the first sign of dimming, colour shift, or flicker. Recheck aim after suspension work, a bull bar install, or any front-end knock.

Regularly inspecting connectors and seals helps prevent intermittent faults and condensation inside the lamps.

{ "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "FAQPage", "mainEntity": [ { "@type": "Question", "name": "What headlight type fits a 1988 Jimny/Sierra?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Most 1988 models use 7-inch round sealed-beam units. Some trims or markets use 7-inch housings that accept H4 replaceable bulbs. For Australia and New Zealand, choose lamps with the correct right-hand-drive (left-dip) beam pattern and appropriate ADR/ECE markings. When converting from sealed-beam to H4, pick reputable housings with proper cutoff and stick with 55/60 W bulbs for legal, reliable performance." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "How can brightness be improved while staying legal?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Start with clean lenses and solid earths, then add a headlight relay harness to reduce voltage drop. With H4 setups, quality 55/60 W bulbs deliver a noticeable lift without overloading wiring. Avoid over-wattage globes that can overheat reflectors or breach regulations. After any changes, re-aim the lights so the cutoff is crisp and not dazzling oncoming traffic." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "How often should the headlights be replaced or serviced?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Replace sealed-beams when a filament fails or output looks tired. For H4 bulbs, refresh every few years or at the first sign of dimming, colour shift, or flicker. Recheck aim after suspension work, a bull bar install, or any front-end knock. Regularly inspecting connectors and seals helps prevent intermittent faults and condensation inside the lamps." } } ]}