Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 2003 Lexus Is-Batteries
12 Volt LED Reverse Lamp (White) with Silver Satin Ring and Black Base - 94307-12
Narva 9-33 Volt LED Reverse (White) With Red LED Tail Ring, 155mm Contoured Chrome Cover - 95628
Explore 4WD & Adventure
12 Volt Led Rear Direction Indicator Lamp (Amber) With Chrome Ring And Black Base - 94305-12
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED Side direction indicator(amber) with 0.5m cable - lamp only - no cover - 96840
Narva 9–33 Volt LED Light Guide Side Marker Lamp (Amber) With Chrome Cover - 92406
2003 Lexus IS Batteries
For the 2003 Lexus IS (IS200/IS300), a 12‑volt lead‑acid starting battery is absolutely relevant and required. Lexus owner’s manuals and workshop wiring diagrams for the 2003 IS specify a conventional 12 V battery to supply engine cranking power and vehicle electronics, and Lexus did not offer an IS hybrid until years later. Technical references such as the Lexus charging system overview and the 2003 IS electrical manual confirm the alternator‑and‑battery setup typical of petrol models of that era.
In this model, the battery sits under the bonnet and handles three big jobs: it delivers the grunt to crank the engine, it stabilises voltage for the ECUs, immobiliser and security system, and it powers lights, audio and accessories when the engine’s off. Without a healthy battery, the IS can be hard to start, throw up warning lights or act glitchy with windows and central locking.
Choosing a replacement is straightforward: look for a 12 V battery with the correct case size and left‑hand positive terminal layout common to this model. Depending on the market, many parts catalogues list a JIS 55D23L/65D23L or an equivalent BCI Group 24F. Aim for a quality unit with around 500–650 CCA, especially if the car sees colder mornings. An AGM unit can be fitted as an upgrade if desired, but the factory setup is a standard flooded battery.
Service life in Aussie and Kiwi conditions is typically 3–5 years. If cranking slows, lights dip at idle, or the case is swollen or leaking, it’s time. A quick multimeter check should show ~12.6 V at rest and ~14.0–14.5 V with the engine running