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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Hilux surf-Oil filter

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2006 Toyota Hilux Surf Oil Filter — What It Does and When to Change It

Yes, an engine oil filter is absolutely fitted to the 2006 Toyota Hilux Surf. Toyota’s workshop documentation for the N215-series Hilux Surf/4Runner (Lubrication section) and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC, PNC 15601) both list an engine oil filter for this model. Typical genuine part references include 90915‑YZZD3 (spin‑on) for the 1GR‑FE 4.0 V6 and element 04152‑31090 for the 1KD‑FTV 3.0 D‑4D diesel, confirming it’s a standard service item.

The oil filter’s job on a 2006 Hilux Surf is straightforward but critical: it traps soot, metal particles, and other grime so clean oil can keep the bearings, cams, and turbo (on the 1KD‑FTV) happy. Clean oil means better protection, quieter running, and longer engine life—especially important for vehicles that see dusty roads, towing, or hot Aussie and Kiwi summers.

Servicing is simple. The oil filter should be replaced at every oil change—generally every 10,000 km or 6 months, whichever comes first. If the Hilux Surf does lots of short trips, off‑road work, heavy towing, or operates in very dusty conditions, bring that interval forward. Use a quality filter (genuine or equivalent) and the correct oil grade for the engine and climate.

The 1GR‑FE V6 uses a spin‑on filter. Lightly oil the new gasket, spin it on by hand until the gasket seats, then tighten about three‑quarters of a turn further (or follow the filter’s printed instruction). The 1KD‑FTV diesel uses a cartridge element inside a reusable housing. Replace both O‑rings, seat the new element the right way up, and torque the cap correctly—25 N·m is typical for Toyota cartridge housings. For both engines, tighten the sump plug to spec (around 39 N·m on many Toyota applications—check the service data for the exact figure), fill with the right amount of oil, then start, check for leaks, and top up as needed.

  • Warm the engine before draining to help the old oil flow out.
  • Pre‑fill a spin‑on filter where practical