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Parts for your 2001 Subaru Legacy-Water pump
Nulon Long Life Green Coolant Concentrate 5L - LL5
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
GMB Water Pump OE Fit OE Performance 2 Year Warranty - GWSU-12AL
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Repco Water Pump Precision Bearings, Corrosion Resistant, OEM Quality 2 Year Warranty - WP8220RP
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Gates Timing Belt Kit - Includes Hydraulic Tensioner & Water Pump - TCKHWPT304
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Gates Timing Belt Kit - Includes Hydraulic Tensioner - TCKHT172
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2001 Subaru Legacy water pump: what it does, why it matters, and when to replace it
Technical sources confirm the 2001 Subaru Legacy absolutely uses a water pump. The Subaru Factory Service Manual for MY2001 Legacy/Outback (Cooling System section) specifies a belt-driven mechanical water pump on EJ-series engines, and OEM parts catalogues list a dedicated pump assembly for these models. Reputable timing component kits from brands like Gates and Dayco for the 2.5-litre EJ25 also include the water pump, which backs up its fitment on this vehicle. So yes—this Legacy runs a conventional liquid-cooling system with a mechanical pump that’s central to engine temperature control.
On a 2001 Subaru Legacy, the water pump circulates coolant through the engine block, heads, radiator, and heater core. That steady flow keeps combustion heat under control, maintains stable operating temperature under the bonnet, and helps protect head gaskets, alloy heads, and other components from thermal stress. If the pump can’t move coolant properly—because of bearing wear, a leaking seal, or an eroded impeller—temperature spikes, overheating, and expensive engine damage can follow quickly.
Because the EJ25’s water pump is driven by the timing belt, most workshops in Australia and New Zealand recommend replacing the pump preventatively during the timing belt service (typically around every 100,000 km or 5 years, whichever comes first). Doing both together saves labour, reduces the chance of future leaks, and keeps the cooling system in top nick. Fresh coolant is part of the job—use genuine Subaru coolant or a high-quality equivalent mixed 50/50 with demineralised water, bleed the system properly, and confirm the radiator fans cycle correctly.
Owners and fleets can stretch pump life with good habits:
- Stick to coolant change intervals and the correct coolant spec to minimise corrosion and cavitation.
- Check for dried coolant tracks around the pump housing and weep hole, listen for bearing growl, and watch the temp gauge on long climbs.
- Inspect the timing belt, idlers, and thermostat as a system, replace suspect parts together rather than piecemeal.
Typical warning signs include a sweet coolant smell after parking, a small drip under the front of the engine, rumbling or whirring from the pump area, rising temps at idle, or a heater that goes cold when the gauge climbs. If any of that turns up, a prompt inspection is smart. For most 2001 Subaru Legacy owners, a fresh timing belt, pump, thermostat, and new coolant every major service interval keeps the boxer running cool and cheerful for many more kilometres.
How often should the water pump be replaced on a 2001 Subaru Legacy?
Best practice in AU/NZ is to replace the pump with the timing belt at roughly 100,000 km or 5 years. Because the EJ25’s pump sits behind the covers, doing it with the belt saves labour and avoids a second teardown if the pump starts leaking later.
What are the common signs the pump is failing?
Look for coolant weeping at the pump, a sweet smell after shutdown, bearing noise near the timing covers, temperature swings under load, or coolant loss with no obvious hose leak. Any of these warrant a cooling system check under the bonnet.
Do the timing belt and water pump really need to be done together?
While not strictly mandatory, it’s strongly recommended on EJ engines. You’re already in there for the belt, adding the pump, thermostat, and idlers is cost-effective and boosts reliability for the next 100,000 km.