Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 2004 Toyota Prius-Radiator

Sort by
Repco Radiator Fin Straightener & Cleaner - RST18

Repco Radiator Fin Straightener & Cleaner - RST18

$20
Fitment Notes:
See More
Tee-Kay Head Chek - HEADCHEK

Tee-Kay Head Chek - HEADCHEK

$105
Fitment Notes:
See More
Repco Radiator Cooling System Kit - RTT1019

Repco Radiator Cooling System Kit - RTT1019

$906
Fitment Notes:
See More
Repco Radiator Pressure Tester Kit - RTT1017

Repco Radiator Pressure Tester Kit - RTT1017

$617
Fitment Notes:
See More
T&E Tools Radiator Back Flusher

T&E Tools Radiator Back Flusher

$92
Fitment Notes:
See More
Tee-Kay Head Chek Fluid 16oz. - TKFLUID500

Tee-Kay Head Chek Fluid 16oz. - TKFLUID500

$27
Fitment Notes:
See More
Toledo Radiator Back Flusher - 308237

Toledo Radiator Back Flusher - 308237

$116
Fitment Notes:
See More

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Toledo Radiator Fin Straightener - 308240

Toledo Radiator Fin Straightener - 308240

$22
Fitment Notes:
See More
T&E Tools Radiator Fin Straightener

T&E Tools Radiator Fin Straightener

$43
Fitment Notes:
See More
Gates Hose Cutter up to 3in ID - 91143

Gates Hose Cutter up to 3in ID - 91143

$213
Fitment Notes:
See More
Toledo Coolant Filler Funnel Set - 305092

Toledo Coolant Filler Funnel Set - 305092

$224
Fitment Notes:
See More
Repco Cooling System Pressure Test Kit - RST194

Repco Cooling System Pressure Test Kit - RST194

$368
Fitment Notes:
See More
Repco 3 Pc Hose Pinching Pliers Set - RST234

Repco 3 Pc Hose Pinching Pliers Set - RST234

$44
Fitment Notes:
See More
T&E Tools Multi-Directional Hose Clamp Pliers

T&E Tools Multi-Directional Hose Clamp Pliers

$61
Fitment Notes:
See More
Toledo Powerbar Impact Wrench - 301337

Toledo Powerbar Impact Wrench - 301337

$208
Fitment Notes:
See More
Viper Brite Coil Cleaner 3.78L - RT300G

Viper Brite Coil Cleaner 3.78L - RT300G

$337
Fitment Notes:
See More
Toledo Cooling System Tester Truck - 308380

Toledo Cooling System Tester Truck - 308380

$787
Fitment Notes:
See More
T&E Tools Hose Pinch-Off Pliers - 250mm - 4256

T&E Tools Hose Pinch-Off Pliers - 250mm - 4256

$94
Fitment Notes:
See More
T&E Tools Universal Automotive Thermometer

T&E Tools Universal Automotive Thermometer

$31
Fitment Notes:
See More
Showing 1 - 20 of 20 products

2004 Toyota Prius radiator – what it does, and how to look after it

Technical sources confirm the 2004 Toyota Prius (NHW20) absolutely uses radiators and they’re central to reliability. Toyota’s 2004 Prius New Car Features (NCF) manual outlines two separate cooling systems: one for the engine (with a conventional radiator) and one for the inverter/transaxle electronics (with its own dedicated radiator and electric pump). The Toyota Repair Manual and Electronic Parts Catalog list both the engine radiator assembly and the inverter radiator, and SAE papers on the second‑generation Prius describe the dual‑loop cooling architecture. So yes, a radiator is very much relevant on this model.

For this Prius, the engine radiator keeps the 1NZ‑FXE petrol engine at the right operating temperature, while the separate inverter radiator looks after the hybrid system’s power electronics. Together, they help the car run efficiently, quietly, and without thermal dramas on hot Aussie or Kiwi days.

As part of routine servicing, the radiator deserves a proper once‑over. Toyota specifies Super Long Life Coolant (pink, pre‑mixed) in both loops. Typical guidance is first coolant replacement at around 160,000 km or 10 years, then every 80,000 km or 5 years thereafter. Sticking to the correct coolant and intervals keeps corrosion at bay and heat transfer on point.

When replacing the radiator or doing coolant work on a 2004 Prius, a few best practices make a big difference:

  • Use genuine or high‑quality equivalent radiators, caps, and hoses, cheap cores can struggle with heat rejection.
  • Never mix coolants, keep the pink SLLC only. If uncertain, fully flush before refilling.
  • Bleed air carefully. A vacuum fill tool is ideal. The inverter loop is bled by running the electric pump, the engine loop needs proper burping to avoid hot spots.
  • Inspect for pink crusting, damp hose ends, fin damage, and a lazy radiator cap, replace anything suspect.
  • Confirm radiator fans cycle correctly and the inverter pump hums steadily with ignition on.

Signs it’s time to act include creeping temperatures, frequent fan roar, coolant loss without obvious leaks, or a sweet smell under the bonnet. Many Gen 2 cars also had the inverter water pump updated, checking pump health while servicing the radiator is smart preventative maintenance.

Handled right, a fresh, correctly filled radiator and clean coolant keep the 2004 Prius happy, sipping fuel and shrugging off summer heat from Cairns to Christchurch.

Popular questions about 2004 Toyota Prius radiators

Does a 2004 Prius really have two radiators?

Yes. There’s the main engine radiator plus a separate, smaller radiator for the inverter/transaxle cooling loop. They sit in the front stack with the A/C condenser. Each loop uses Toyota pink SLLC and has its own service needs.

The dual‑loop setup lets the hybrid electronics run at their preferred temperature without being affected by engine heat swings, improving efficiency and component life.

What coolant should be used, and how often should it be changed?

Use Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink, premixed). Typical schedules call for an initial change around 160,000 km or 10 years, then every 80,000 km or 5 years for both engine and inverter loops.

If the history’s unknown, a full drain and refill (or flush) with the correct coolant is the safest path. Avoid mixing coolants to prevent additive clash and corrosion.

Can they drive with a minor radiator leak?

It’s risky. Even a slow leak can pull in air, reduce heat transfer, and stress the head gasket or inverter system. Top‑ups are a band‑aid, the leak should be located and fixed promptly.

If temperature warnings appear or the hybrid system throws thermal alerts, stop, let it cool, and arrange repair rather than pressing on.