Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Price

Parts for your 1993 Suzuki Jimny-Headlights

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Showing 40 - 65 of 65 products

1993 Suzuki Jimny Headlights

Headlights are absolutely fitted to the 1993 Suzuki Jimny (sold in Australia as the Sierra in many trims) and are essential equipment. This is backed by Suzuki factory owner’s and service manuals for the SJ413/JA11 series, which specify headlamps and replaceable bulbs, and by roadworthiness standards like Australian Design Rule 13/00 (Installation of Lighting and Light-Signalling Devices) and New Zealand’s Warrant of Fitness rules that require operational headlamps for night and poor‑visibility driving.

On a 1993 Jimny, the headlights do the simple but vital job of lighting the way on back roads, beaches, and bush tracks, while making the vehicle visible to others. Most Aussie and Kiwi examples from this era use H4 60/55 W halogen bulbs in conventional reflector housings, though some variants and markets ran sealed-beam units. Either way, reliable headlights are a must for safe touring and daily commuting.

As part of regular servicing, it’s worth giving the headlights a once‑over. Replace bulbs in pairs to keep colour and brightness even. If yours runs H4 halogens, avoid touching the glass with bare fingers (skin oils shorten bulb life). If your vehicle has sealed beams, swap the whole lamp when it dims or fails. After water crossings or rough tracks, check for moisture in the lens and cracked seals, and make sure the headlight plugs and earth points are clean and tight.

Aim matters, too. Off‑road bumps can nudge the buckets out of alignment, so re‑aiming prevents dazzling oncoming traffic and improves your own vision. Workshops will set aim to ADR/WoF specs, but a careful home adjustment against a wall will get it close. If you’re tempted by higher‑watt bulbs or LED conversions, remember: any change must comply with local regulations and the lamp’s design—often that means sticking with standard H4s unless the whole assembly is approved.

  • Inspect lenses for haze and yellowing, polish if needed to restore output.
  • Check operation on low and high beam, replace both bulbs if one fails.
  • Clean connectors, use dielectric grease to ward off corrosion.
  • Verify beam aim after suspension changes, big loads, or hard off‑roading.

Bottom line: keeping the Jimny’s headlights bright, legal, and correctly aimed makes night runs safer and WoF/rego checks far less stressful.

What headlight bulb fits a 1993 Suzuki Jimny/Sierra?

Most Australia/New Zealand vehicles of this vintage use H4 60/55 W halogen bulbs in reflector housings, but some trims and markets ran sealed-beam lamps. It’s best to confirm against the owner’s manual or a parts catalogue using the VIN, especially if the front end has been modified over the years.

How do you adjust the headlight aim?

Use the adjuster screws on the headlight buckets. Park on level ground about five metres from a wall, set tyre pressures and vehicle load as normal, then tweak vertical and horizontal screws until the cut-off sits at a sensible height without dazzling. For perfect compliance, ask a workshop to set aim to ADR/WoF specs using a beam setter.

Can you legally fit LED bulbs to the factory housings?

Often not. In many Australian states and in New Zealand, retrofitting LED bulbs into halogen-designed housings isn’t compliant unless the complete headlamp assembly is approved for LED use. If you want brighter lights, choose quality H4 halogens or upgrade to an approved replacement headlamp unit that meets the local standard.

{ "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "FAQPage", "mainEntity": [ { "@type": "Question", "name": "What headlight bulb fits a 1993 Suzuki Jimny/Sierra?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Most Australia/New Zealand vehicles of this vintage use H4 60/55 W halogen bulbs in reflector housings, but some trims and markets ran sealed-beam lamps. It’s best to confirm against the owner’s manual or a parts catalogue using the VIN, especially if the front end has been modified over the years." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "How do you adjust the headlight aim?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Use the adjuster screws on the headlight buckets. Park on level ground about five metres from a wall, set tyre pressures and vehicle load as normal, then tweak vertical and horizontal screws until the cut-off sits at a sensible height without dazzling. For perfect compliance, ask a workshop to set aim to ADR/WoF specs using a beam setter." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Can you legally fit LED bulbs to the factory housings?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Often not. In many Australian states and in New Zealand, retrofitting LED bulbs into halogen-designed housings isn’t compliant unless the complete headlamp assembly is approved for LED use. If you want brighter lights, choose quality H4 halogens or upgrade to an approved replacement headlamp unit that meets the local standard." } } ]}