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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Land cruiser-Tail lights

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OEX Canbus Trailer Lights Trailer Plug Adaptor - ACX7210
OEX

OEX Canbus Trailer Lights Trailer Plug Adaptor - ACX7210

$157
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2006 Toyota Land Cruiser taillights — purpose, care and replacement

Taillights are absolutely fitted to the 2006 Toyota Land Cruiser. This is confirmed by Toyota’s 2006 Land Cruiser Owner’s Manual and the Toyota Repair Manual for Chassis &, Body, which detail the rear combination lamp assembly including tail (rear position) lamps. Regulatory frameworks like Australian Design Rule (ADR) 13/00 for the installation of lighting and the NZ Transport Agency’s Vehicle Inspection Requirements Manual (VIRM) also require red rear position lamps on road-going vehicles. So, yes — taillights are present and mandatory on a 2006 Land Cruiser.

On a tough touring rig like a 2006 Land Cruiser, the taillights do more than glow red. They signal presence at night or in low visibility, share brake intent, indicate turns, and light the number plate — keeping everyone on the road on the same page. Being a rear combination unit, the assembly typically houses tail, stop, indicator and reverse functions behind a robust lens. Whether it’s a 100 Series wagon or a 70 Series workhorse, a healthy taillight setup is part of its go-anywhere reliability.

As part of routine servicing, it pays to give the 2006toyotalandcruiser taillights a quick once-over. Lenses can haze from UV, seals can harden, and bulbs eventually give up — especially after plenty of corrugations. Keeping them tidy avoids avoidable defect notices and keeps ADR/NZTA compliance intact.

  • Visual check: Look for cracked lenses, faded reflectors, moisture inside the housing, and loose fittings.
  • Bulb types: Verify the correct bulb spec in the owner’s manual, common fits include 21/5W dual‑filament or W21/5W wedge types for tail/stop, with separate indicator and reverse bulbs.
  • Electrical health: Inspect the fuse, bulb sockets and earth points, a weak earth often causes dim or flickery lamps.
  • Sealing: Replace perished gaskets to keep dust and water out, especially if the wagon sees beach work or river crossings.
  • Trailer wiring: Test with the trailer plugged in, poor trailer grounds can back‑feed and upset the Land Cruiser’s rear lights.
  • LED upgrades: If fitting LEDs, use ADR/ECE‑compliant units and load resistors or a suitable flasher relay to keep indicator rate legal.
  • Clean and protect: Wash road grime from the lens and apply a light plastic protectant, use dielectric grease on connectors to fight corrosion.

Replacement is straightforward: open the tailgate (or drop the tray for 70 Series), remove the retaining screws, ease the lamp out without straining the harness, swap bulbs or the assembly, and refit. After reassembly, test tail, brake, indicator, reverse and number plate lights. It’s a small job that pays off in visibility, safety and hassle‑free rego checks.

Popular questions on 2006toyotalandcruiser taillights

What bulbs does a 2006 Land Cruiser taillight use?

Depending on the variant and market, the rear combination lamp commonly uses a dual‑filament 21/5W bulb (tail/stop) plus separate bulbs for indicator and reverse. Some trims use W21/5W wedge types. Checking the owner’s manual or the marking on the lamp body ensures the right fit and wattage, keeping brightness and legality spot on.

Why are my Land Cruiser’s taillights dim or intermittent?

Most often it’s a poor earth, corroded socket, ageing bulb, or moisture in the housing. Clean the contacts, refresh the earth point to bare metal, replace tired bulbs, and renew the gasket if there’s condensation. Also inspect trailer wiring — a dodgy trailer ground can make the Cruiser’s rear lights misbehave.

Are aftermarket LED taillights legal in Australia and New Zealand?

They can be, provided the lamps are ADR/ECE‑compliant, emit the correct red/amber/white colours, and meet brightness and visibility angles. Ensure indicators flash at the correct rate by adding resistors or a compatible flasher relay. Fitment must follow ADR 13/00 (AU) and VIRM guidance (NZ) for installation and performance.

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