Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

CATEGORIES

Brands

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 2006 Toyota Prius-Radiator

2006 Toyota Prius Radiator — What it does and how to look after it

According to Toyota’s own technical literature for the 2004–2009 Prius (NHW20) — including the Repair Manual and New Car Features — the vehicle uses a conventional engine radiator with electric cooling fans, and also has a separate inverter/transaxle cooling circuit with its own small radiator. Toyota’s Safety Recall A0N/90L on the inverter coolant pump further confirms that dedicated hybrid cooling loop. So yes, a radiator is absolutely relevant and fitted to a 2006 Toyota Prius.

The Prius’s engine radiator quietly keeps the 1NZ-FXE 1.5‑litre petrol engine at the right temperature while you cruise, crawl, and coast on electric power. It sheds heat from Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (the pink stuff), helped along by electric fans that kick in as needed. In front of it lives the A/C condenser, and nearby is the smaller inverter radiator for the hybrid system — a stacked team effort to manage heat efficiently without wasting fuel.

Looking after the radiator is straightforward and pays off in reliability. Use Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (SLLC) or an equivalent P-OAT pink coolant. In AU/NZ conditions, the typical Toyota interval is up to 160,000 km or 10 years initially, then every 80,000 km or 5 years. Don’t mix colours or brands. If a flush is due, a vacuum fill or careful bleeding is smart on the Prius because trapped air can upset cooling and heater performance.

  • Check the coolant level in the radiator (when cold) and overflow bottle monthly.
  • Look for pink crusty residue, damp spots, or staining around end tanks, hose joints, and the cap.
  • Inspect hoses for soft spots, swelling, or cracks