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Parts for your 2003 Toyota Echo|yaris-Tail lights
2003 Toyota Echo/Yaris Tail-lights
Tail-lights are absolutely fitted and relevant on the 2003 Toyota Echo/Yaris. This is confirmed by Toyota’s Owner’s Manual and Repair Manual for the XP10-series Echo/Yaris (lighting section), and by regulatory requirements including Australia’s ADR 13/00 (installation of lighting), ADR 49/00 (front and rear position lamps and stop lamps), and New Zealand’s Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004. These sources require rear position lamps (tail-lights) as standard road equipment, so the 2003 Echo/Yaris uses them as part of its primary lighting and safety system.
On this model, the tail-lights pull a lot of weight: they make the Echo/Yaris visible from behind at night or in lousy weather, and they share housing with the stop lamps, indicators, and reverse light. The lens is red for the tail/stop section with amber indicators to meet ADR/ECE colour rules, and units differ slightly between hatch and sedan (the sedan may have an additional inner lamp on the boot lid).
As part of regular servicing, a quick tail-light check is simple and worthwhile. Lights on, walk around, and confirm both rear lamps glow evenly. Press the brake pedal (or ask a mate) to confirm brake lights, then test indicators and reverse. If brightness looks odd on one side, that’s often a blown bulb or a poor earth.
- Common bulb types include P21/5W (dual‑filament stop/tail), P21W (single‑filament indicator or reverse, market‑dependent), and small W5W/T10 for the number plate. Always confirm against the owner’s manual or the existing bulb markings.
- If a new bulb doesn’t fix it, check the fuse, look for corrosion in the socket, and inspect the earth connection. Hatch models can suffer broken wires in the rubber loom between body and hatch – a known gremlin as they age.
- When refitting a lamp unit, seat the gasket properly to keep water out. Tighten screws snug, not mega‑tight, to avoid cracking the plastic. A dab of dielectric grease on bulb bases and connectors helps keep moisture at bay.
Condensation inside the lens usually points to a tired seal or a tiny crack. If drying the unit and reseating/replacing the gasket doesn’t hold, replace the lamp assembly. For those keen on LED upgrades, use quality, ADR/ECE‑compliant bulbs, note that indicators may need load resistors to prevent hyperflash, and beam pattern and brightness must be right so other drivers aren’t dazzled.
Kept clean and sealed, the Echo/Yaris tail-lights are low‑maintenance and cheap to service. A quick check at each oil change keeps the little Toyota visible and safe on Aussie and Kiwi roads.
What bulb type fits a 2003 Echo/Yaris tail-light?
Most use a P21/5W dual‑filament for stop/tail, plus P21W singles for indicators and reverse, with W5W/T10 for the number plate. Variations exist by body style and market spec, so it’s best to match what’s in the car or cross‑check the owner’s manual and the markings on the old bulb.
Why is my tail-light still out after replacing the bulb?
Likely culprits are a blown fuse, corrosion in the socket, a bad earth, or damaged wiring—especially in the hatch’s rubber loom between the body and tailgate. Clean the contacts, test the earth, and inspect wiring for breaks. If needed, repair the loom and apply dielectric grease to prevent future issues.
Can the Echo/Yaris use LED tail-light bulbs?
Yes, but choose ADR/ECE‑compliant LEDs with the correct base and brightness. Indicators may hyperflash without resistors or an LED‑ready flasher. Ensure the light output and colour meet road rules so the car stays legal and safe.