Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 1991 Suzuki Swift-Tail lights

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Showing 1 - 39 of 295 products

1991 Suzuki Swift tail-lights: what they do and how to keep them sorted

Tail-lights are absolutely fitted to the 1991 Suzuki Swift. Suzuki’s factory service information for the SF-series Swift (circa 1989–1994) lists rear combination lamps with dual‑filament stop/tail bulbs, and the owner’s manual specifies the bulb rating (commonly 12V 21/5W). That aligns with road rules too: Australian Design Rules (ADR 13/00 installation and related lighting standards) and UN ECE Regulation 7 require rear position (tail) lamps, so the 1991 Swift ships with them from new.

On this little hatch, the tail-lights are the red rear position lamps that glow when the parkers or headlights are on. They make the Swift visible from behind at night and in foul weather, and sit alongside the brighter stop lamps, indicators, and the reflector in the same rear combination unit. If they’re dull, cracked or not working, visibility takes a dive — and so does the chance of passing a WOF or keeping things road‑legal in Australia.

Servicing the Swift’s tail-lights is easy and worth adding to regular maintenance. A quick check each month does the trick: lights on, walk around, and confirm both sides are evenly lit. Clean the lenses with mild car shampoo to clear road grime, and look for hairline cracks or moisture inside, fogging usually means a perished seal that needs attention. Most cars of this era use a dual‑filament 12V 21/5W bulb (P21/5W, BAY15d) for stop/tail — check the owner’s manual to confirm the exact spec.

To replace a bulb, open the hatch, remove the trim panel behind the lamp, undo the fasteners, and withdraw the lamp enough to access the bulb holder. Twist the holder, swap the bulb without touching the glass with bare fingers, then reassemble and test. If a new bulb doesn’t light, check the tail/park lamp fuse, clean the bulb holder contacts, and inspect the earth (ground) wire for corrosion. Uneven brightness side‑to‑side often points to a dodgy earth.

Thinking about LEDs? Only use ADR/E‑marked, vehicle‑specific replacements that maintain correct brightness and beam pattern, some generic LED retrofits won’t meet compliance and can cause WOF or rego grief. For many owners, sticking with the correct filament bulb is the simplest, compliant option.

  • Do a lights check monthly and before long trips.
  • Keep lenses clean and dry to maximise visibility.
  • Replace bulbs in pairs to keep light output even.

What bulb fits a 1991 Suzuki Swift tail-light?

Most 1991 Swifts use a dual‑filament 12V 21/5W bulb (often labelled P21/5W with a BAY15d base) for the stop/tail function. Always confirm against the owner’s manual or the marking on the old bulb before buying.

Can I use LED tail-light bulbs and still pass a WOF or stay ADR‑compliant?

Only if the LED replacement is specifically designed and approved for that application and meets brightness/beam requirements. Many generic LED bulbs won’t comply, can trigger warnings, or give poor light distribution. When in doubt, use the specified filament type.

Why is one tail-light dim or dead even after a new bulb?

Common culprits are a blown fuse for the tail circuit, corrosion on the bulb holder contacts, or a poor earth connection inside the lamp harness. Clean the contacts, check the earth, and verify voltage at the holder with a multimeter.

{ "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "FAQPage", "mainEntity": [ { "@type": "Question", "name": "What bulb fits a 1991 Suzuki Swift tail-light?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Most 1991 Swifts use a dual‑filament 12V 21/5W bulb (often labelled P21/5W with a BAY15d base) for the stop/tail function. Always confirm against the owner’s manual or the marking on the old bulb before buying." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Can I use LED tail-light bulbs and still pass a WOF or stay ADR‑compliant?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Only if the LED replacement is specifically designed and approved for that application and meets brightness/beam requirements. Many generic LED bulbs won’t comply, can trigger warnings, or give poor light distribution. When in doubt, use the specified filament type." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Why is one tail-light dim or dead even after a new bulb?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Common culprits are a blown fuse for the tail circuit, corrosion on the bulb holder contacts, or a poor earth connection inside the lamp harness. Clean the contacts, check the earth, and verify voltage at the holder with a multimeter." } } ]}