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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Mark x-Water pump
Nulon Long Life Green Coolant Concentrate 5L - LL5
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
GMB Water Pump OE Fit OE Performance 2 Year Warranty - GWD-45A
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GMB Water Pump OE Fit OE Performance 2 Year Warranty - GWF-106A
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GMB Water Pump OE Fit OE Performance 2 Year Warranty - GWG-77A
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Tru-Flow Water Pump With Pulley, Heavy Duty Bearings & Seals, OEM Quality, 2 Year Warranty - TF2079P
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Tru-Flow Water Pump Heavy Duty Bearings & Seals, OEM Quality, 2 Year Warranty - Without Housing - TF8144
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Tru-Flow Water Pump Heavy Duty Bearings & Seals, OEM Quality, 2 Year Warranty - TF8471
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Tru-Flow Water Pump Heavy Duty Bearings & Seals, OEM Quality, 2 Year Warranty - TF8161
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Tru-Flow Water Pump Heavy Duty Bearings & Seals, OEM Quality, 2 Year Warranty - TF3117
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2006 Toyota Mark X water pump — what it does and when to replace it
Based on technical sources, the 2006 Toyota Mark X (GRX120/GRX121/GRX125) absolutely uses a water pump. Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalog lists a Water Pump Assembly for both the 4GR-FSE 2.5L and 3GR-FSE 3.0L V6 engines, and the Toyota Repair Manual for the GRX120 series includes a Cooling section with water pump removal/installation procedures. These GR-series engines share their mechanical, belt-driven pump design with related Lexus models running the same engines, which further backs up fitment.
On a 2006 Mark X, the water pump is the workhorse that keeps coolant circulating through the block, heads, heater core and radiator. That steady flow pulls heat away from the engine so it can run at the right temperature, avoiding overheating on long Kiwi hill climbs or hot Aussie days in traffic. The pump is driven by the accessory belt, so when it’s healthy the temperature gauge stays planted, the heater works properly and the coolant remains clean and stable.
While there’s no fixed mileage where Toyota mandates replacement, the pump should be inspected at regular services. Many owners choose to refresh it preventively when doing a drive belt or coolant change, especially past 150,000–200,000 kilometres. The Mark X uses Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink), which typically has a long service life, replacing coolant on schedule helps the pump seal live longer.
- Common warning signs include: pink or whitish crust around the pump or under the car, a sweet coolant smell, a chirp/whine from the pump area, wobble at the pulley, rising temps at idle, or poor cabin heat.
- Good practice during replacement: use a quality pump (OEM or equivalent), fit a new gasket/O-ring, check the accessory belt and idlers, consider replacing the thermostat, and always bleed air from the system.
- After refilling, run the engine with the heater on hot to purge air, top up the reservoir to the correct mark, and recheck for leaks over the next couple of drives.
A tidy water pump service on a Mark X helps protect head gaskets, keeps the cabin toasty in winter, and prevents those stressful roadside overheats. For local conditions across Australia and New Zealand, regular coolant checks and a quick look for seepage at each oil change go a long way toward trouble-free motoring.
Popular questions about 2006 Toyota Mark X water pumps
How long does a 2006 Toyota Mark X water pump typically last?
On these GR-series V6s, many pumps run well past 150,000 kilometres, and plenty make it beyond 200,000 kilometres with proper coolant maintenance. There’s no hard replacement interval, condition-based servicing works best. If it’s quiet, dry and the temps are steady, it can stay in service.
That said, once the vehicle is in higher mileage territory or the belt and coolant are due, replacing the pump proactively can be smart, especially before long trips in Aussie heat or Alpine passes in NZ.
What are the first signs the Mark X water pump is failing?
Early hints include a faint chirp or whine from the front of the engine, pink residue or dampness at the pump weep hole, a slow drop in coolant level, or the heater going lukewarm at idle. If the temperature gauge starts creeping up in traffic, stop and inspect—overheating can snowball quickly.
Catching a minor weep early usually means a straightforward swap, rather than an urgent repair after an overheat.
Should the water pump be replaced with the accessory (serpentine) belt?
It’s a sensible combo job. The pump is driven by the same belt, and with the belt off you’re already halfway there. Pairing the pump with a fresh belt, tensioner check and new coolant gives a clean slate and saves labour if the pump needs doing soon after.
If the existing pump is bone-dry and quiet, it can stay—but many owners opt to replace it during major cooling system service for peace of mind.