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Parts for your 2007 Subaru Legacy-Thermostat housing

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2007 Subaru Legacy Thermostat Housing — What It Does and How to Look After It

Technical sources confirm the 2007 Subaru Legacy does use a thermostat housing. The Subaru Legacy/Outback 2005–2009 Service Manual (Cooling section) shows the thermostat seated at the water pump inlet with a removable “thermostat cover” (housing). Subaru’s FAST electronic parts catalogue lists a “water inlet/thermostat cover” for both the EJ25 four-cylinder and EZ30 six-cylinder variants. Aftermarket catalogues for gaskets (e.g., Fel‑Pro/Dayco/Gates) also list a thermostat housing gasket for this model, which further verifies the part’s presence.

On this Legacy, the thermostat housing is the small alloy cover that clamps the thermostat in place where coolant returns from the lower radiator hose. Its job is simple but crucial: seal the thermostat and direct flow into the water pump, helping the engine warm up smartly and then hold steady operating temperature. A good seal here keeps pressure up, flow correct, and the heater nice and toasty on a frosty morning.

As part of regular servicing, it pays to give the housing area a quick once‑over. Under the bonnet (and only when the engine is dead cold), check around the lower radiator hose connection for tell‑tale white or green residue, dampness, or staining. That can point to a perished O‑ring/gasket, pitting on the mating face, or a hairline crack from past overtightening. If coolant level keeps dropping or there’s a whiff of sweet coolant after a drive, the housing and hose junction are prime suspects.

Replacing the thermostat or its housing isn’t a drama for a competent home mechanic. Drain enough coolant to sit below the housing, remove the lower hose if needed, undo the two housing bolts, and lift the cover. Clean the mating surfaces gently, fit a quality OEM‑spec thermostat with a fresh O‑ring/gasket, and reinstall the cover, tightening the bolts evenly to the service‑manual torque. Refill with Subaru‑approved coolant (and conditioner where specified), bleed the system with the heater on hot, and check for leaks once it’s up to temp. Using genuine or OEM‑equivalent parts matters here