Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

CATEGORIES

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2004 Toyota Highlander-Clutch kit

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Showing 1 - 1 of 1 products

2004 Toyota Highlander (Kluger): Is a clutch kit relevant?

Short answer: a clutch kit isn’t used on the 2004 Toyota Highlander, known as the Kluger in Australia and New Zealand. According to Toyota’s 2004 Highlander/Kluger owner’s documentation and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue, this model was sold with automatic transmissions only (Aisin units such as U241E/U151E and their AWD “F” variants). There was no manual gearbox option in these markets, so there’s no conventional clutch assembly to replace. Aisin technical references for the U241E and U151E also describe a torque converter automatic, not a manual friction clutch.

In a manual car, a clutch kit includes the pressure plate, friction disc and release bearing to engage and disengage engine power to the gearbox. The 2004 Highlander/Kluger uses a torque converter and a flexplate instead, so take-off and gear changes are managed hydraulically and electronically. Even the later hybrid variant runs an eCVT with a planetary gearset—again, no traditional clutch kit involved.

If someone’s chasing “clutch” issues on a 2004 Highlander/Kluger, what they’re likely feeling is related to the automatic transmission or torque converter. Common concerns include shudder under light throttle, flare between shifts, or harsh engagement. These are typically tied to ageing ATF, valve body wear, torque converter lock-up clutch behaviour, or solenoid control—none of which are addressed by a manual clutch kit.

  • Service focus: use the correct Toyota ATF WS (check the handbook), and consider changing fluid on condition or every 60,000–100,000 km in tougher Aussie/Kiwi conditions.
  • Inspect the transmission cooler lines, radiator cooler, and mounts, heat and contamination are the enemies of these Aisin autos.
  • If shudder persists, a technician can check for TCM updates, test line pressure, and assess valve body and torque converter health.

Bottom line, there’s no clutch kit to fit to this vehicle. Proper transmission servicing and diagnosis are the way to keep a 2004 Highlander/Kluger shifting smoothly.

Popular questions about a 2004 Toyota Highlander clutch kit

Does my 2004 Highlander/Kluger have a clutch I can replace?
No. It uses an automatic transmission with a torque converter, so there’s no manual clutch kit (pressure plate, disc, release bearing). Any driveline “shudder” or slip will be in the auto trans or torque converter, not a serviceable clutch kit.

Why does my 2004 Highlander feel like it’s slipping—could that be the clutch?
What feels like clutch slip is usually shift flare or torque converter lock-up issues. Check ATF condition and level (Toyota ATF WS), and have a transmission specialist assess solenoids, valve body wear, and software updates. Internal clutch packs do exist inside the auto, but they’re part of transmission overhaul—not a bolt-in clutch kit.

What maintenance should I do instead of a clutch replacement?
Stick with regular transmission servicing: correct-spec ATF, inspection of cooler lines and the radiator cooler, and checking mounts. In harsher climates or towing use, fluid changes around 60,000–100,000 km help. If symptoms remain, a scan and pressure test can pinpoint valve body or torque converter concerns.

{ "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "FAQPage", "mainEntity": [ { "@type": "Question", "name": "Does my 2004 Highlander/Kluger have a clutch I can replace?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "No. It uses an automatic transmission with a torque converter, so there’s no manual clutch kit (pressure plate, disc, release bearing). Any driveline “shudder” or slip will be in the auto trans or torque converter, not a serviceable clutch kit." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Why does my 2004 Highlander feel like it’s slipping—could that be the clutch?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "What feels like clutch slip is usually shift flare or torque converter lock-up issues. Check ATF condition and level (Toyota ATF WS), and have a transmission specialist assess solenoids, valve body wear, and software updates. Internal clutch packs do exist inside the auto, but they’re part of transmission overhaul—not a bolt-in clutch kit." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "What maintenance should I do instead of a clutch replacement?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Stick with regular transmission servicing: correct-spec ATF, inspection of cooler lines and the radiator cooler, and checking mounts. In harsher climates or towing use, fluid changes around 60,000–100,000 km help. If symptoms remain, a scan and pressure test can pinpoint valve body or torque converter concerns." } } ]}