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Parts for your 2000 Toyota Echo|yaris-Tail lights
LED Autolamps Multi Volt Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp 97 LEDs With Black Bracket - 200BARWM
LED Autolamps 12/24 Multi Volt Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Assembly Lamp With 108 LEDs - 80BARWM
Explore 4WD & Adventure
LED Autolamps 12V Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse With Reflectors And 500mm LP Cable - SO283ARWM2LR12
LED Autolamps 12V Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Assembly Clear Lens Chrome Bracket - 82CARW
LED Autolamps LHS, Stop/Tail/SEQ-Indicator/Reverse/Reflector 12/24V 284 X 100 X 37mm, DT04 Connector - SO284LHS
LED Autolamps RHS, Stop/Tail/SEQ-Indicator/Reverse/Reflector 12/24V 284 X 100 X 37mm, DT04 Connector - SO284RHS
LED Autolamps 12/2V Maxilamp LED Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reflector Black Chrome Bolt Mount - MAXILAMPC1XCE
LED Autolamps Multi Volt Stop/Tail/Indicator Assembly 72 LEDs With Black Bracket 190x100x28mm - 80BARM
LED Autolamps 355 Series Multi Volt Black Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse/Reflector LHS & RHS Twin Blister Pack - 355BARWM-2
LED Autolamps Rear Taillight Harness To Suit MY22 Ranger / MY20 Ram Plug To Bare Wires - PATCH-RAM.UNI
2000 Toyota Echo/Yaris tail-lights: purpose, care, and replacement
Technical sources confirm tail-lights are fitted and fully relevant on the 2000 Toyota Echo/Yaris. The Toyota Echo/Yaris Repair Manual (Chassis & Body, XP10 series), the Electrical Wiring Diagram showing the rear combination light and TAIL circuits, and the 2000 Owner’s Manual (headlight/park/taillight switch operation) all specify rear position (tail) lamps. Regulatory requirements also back this up: Australian Design Rules (ADR 13/00 and ADR 49/00) and New Zealand’s Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004 require red rear position lamps. So, yes—this model uses tail-lights as standard equipment.
On the 2000 Echo/Yaris, tail-lights do more than glow at night. They mark the rear of the car so others can judge distance, outline and width in the dark, rain, or fog. Housed within the rear combination light assemblies, the tail-light (rear position) function runs alongside brake, indicator, and reverse lamps. When the park or headlamps are switched on, the tail-lights illuminate at a steady, lower intensity to keep the car visible without dazzling anyone. Good tail-lights help prevent nose-to-tail crashes at dusk and during those gloomy winter commutes common across Australia and New Zealand.
For servicing, a quick check every few weeks is a smart habit. With the park lamps on, walk to the rear and confirm both sides glow evenly and at a consistent brightness. If one side looks dim, that can point to a tired globe, a poor earth, or a cloudy lens. The Echo/Yaris uses replaceable globes in the rear combination unit, so keeping a spare pair in the glovebox is handy. When replacing, match the globe type and wattage listed on the lamp or in the owner’s manual to avoid electrical grief or melted sockets. If upgrading to LEDs, only use road-legal retrofit options that maintain correct brightness and beam spread—compliance matters for WOF/rego and insurance.
- Clean the lenses with mild car shampoo