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Parts for your 2000 Nissan Serena-Tail lights

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2000 Nissan Serena Tail-Lights: what they do and how to look after them

Tail-lights are absolutely fitted to the 2000 Nissan Serena (C24). This is confirmed by the 2000 Serena Owner’s Manual (Lights section) and Nissan’s FAST parts catalogue listings for the rear combination lamp. They’re also mandatory under Australian Design Rules (ADR 13/00, 49/00) and the NZ Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004, so tail-lamps are relevant and required on this vehicle.

On a 2000 Nissan Serena, the tail-lights sit in the rear combination assemblies and provide the red running light that makes the van visible from behind at night or in foul weather. They share housing with the stop, indicator, and reverse lamps, and are designed to balance brightness so following drivers can judge distance without glare. Good tail-lights keep the Serena road-legal for rego or WOF and make dusk drives far less stressful.

When it’s time for replacement or a quick service, the approach is straightforward. Many markets use dual‑filament rear bulbs for tail/stop (commonly 21/5W such as W21/5W/7443 or P21/5W bayonet types). Because there are variations by market and trim, it’s best to confirm the exact bulb spec in the Serena owner’s manual or parts label. If upgrading to LED bulbs, only use ADR/NZ‑compliant options with the correct colour and brightness to avoid a WOF fail or glare for others.

  • Tools: Phillips screwdriver and a 10 mm socket typically cover the lamp assembly fixings.
  • Access: Open the tailgate, remove the fasteners, then ease the assembly straight back to avoid breaking locating pins.
  • Bulb swap: Don’t touch halogen glass with bare fingers, use a tissue or gloves. Check holder contacts for corrosion.
  • Sealing: Inspect the foam gasket, replace if perished to prevent moisture and condensation.
  • Testing: With a mate or a wall behind, check tail (park lights on), brake, and indicators. Verify both sides are even.

Common faults include blown bulbs, poor earths, cracked lenses, and water ingress. A dab of dielectric grease on terminals helps ward off corrosion. If both tail-lights quit at once, check the relevant fuse and any towbar wiring splices. As part of routine servicing, a quick walk‑around light check every few months keeps the Serena visible, compliant, and safe.

Popular questions about 2000 Nissan Serena tail-lights

What bulb type does the 2000 Nissan Serena use for the tail-light?
Depending on market, it often uses a dual‑filament 21/5W bulb (e.g., W21/5W/7443 wedge or P21/5W bayonet). Because trims vary, the sure bet is to check the owner’s manual or the marking on the existing bulb holder. Match voltage, base type, and wattage to avoid dim or too‑bright output.

Why is there condensation in the Serena’s tail-light?
Moisture usually comes from a hairline crack, a tired gasket, or a loose vent. Remove the assembly, dry it gently, renew the seal or gasket, and replace cracked lenses. A small sachet of desiccant can help, but addressing the leak source is the real fix.

Both tail-lights stopped working—what should be checked first?
Start with the tail/park light fuse, then inspect the bulb holders and earth points. If a towbar harness is fitted, look for corroded or dodgy splices. If fuses and bulbs are fine, the lighting switch or a broken wire in the loom could be the culprit.

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