Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 2007 Toyota Land cruiser-Tail lights
2007 Toyota Land Cruiser tail-lights
Yes, tail-lights are absolutely used on the 2007 Toyota Land Cruiser. This is confirmed by Toyota’s owner’s and repair manuals for the 100/200 Series models, along with roadworthy standards like Australia’s ADR 13/00 and ADR 49/00 and New Zealand’s Vehicle Inspection Requirements Manual (VIRM – Lighting). These sources require rear position lamps (tail-lights), stop lamps and indicators on passenger vehicles, so the Land Cruiser is built with rear combination lamps as standard kit.
On a 2007 Land Cruiser, the tail-lights form part of the rear combination lamp assembly. Their job is simple but critical: make the vehicle visible from behind at night and in poor weather, and clearly signal braking and turns. The assembly typically houses the tail (rear position) lamps, brake lights, indicators, and reverse lamps behind a single lens. Good brightness, correct colour, and proper sealing keep the Cruiser safe and legal from the back end.
For routine servicing, it’s worth giving the rear lamps a quick once-over. Look for dullness, cracks in the lens, moisture or dust inside, and damaged bulb holders. A dim or pinkish glow often points to a failing globe or a poor earth connection. If one side is out, replace globes in pairs where practical so brightness stays even left-to-right.
DIY replacement is straightforward on most 2007 Land Cruiser variants: open the tailgate, remove the two retaining screws, then slide the lamp rearward to release the locator clips. Twist the bulb holders to remove, swap the globes, and refit carefully so the foam gasket seals against the body. Don’t overtighten the screws—snug is enough to avoid cracking the lens.
Globe types vary by build (late 100 vs early 200 Series), so check the owner’s manual or the markings on the original bulbs. Many owners upgrade to ADR-compliant LEDs for better brightness and longevity. If fitting LEDs for indicators, address hyper-flash with an LED-compatible flasher relay or suitable load resistors, mounted where they won’t overheat or melt trim.
Keep the lenses clean with a non-abrasive wash, and fix any water ingress promptly—moisture corrodes contacts and kills bulbs. If the lamp is repeatedly blowing globes, test the charging system and earths, high voltage or poor grounds can shorten bulb life.
- Check operation: tail, brake, indicators and reverse, at least monthly.
- Replace damaged gaskets or cracked lenses to keep the housing dry.
- Use quality, standards-compliant bulbs or LEDs to stay road legal.
Popular questions
What bulb type fits a 2007 Land Cruiser tail-light?
It depends on whether the vehicle is a late 100 Series or early 200 Series, as bulb families can differ. Commonly, the stop/tail uses a dual-filament 21/5W style and the indicator a single 21W, but the exact base (e.g., wedge vs bayonet) varies by market and build. The safest approach is to check the owner’s manual, the printing on the old bulb, or supply the VIN to a parts specialist.
My indicators flash fast after LED upgrades—how do I fix it?
That’s normal hyper-flash from the low current draw of LEDs. Fit an LED-compatible flasher relay if available for your Land Cruiser, or add appropriately rated load resistors in parallel with each indicator circuit. Mount resistors to metal and away from wiring, as they get hot in use.
Is tinting the tail-lights legal in Australia or New Zealand?
Only if the lamps still meet brightness, colour and visibility requirements in ADRs (AU) and the NZ VIRM. Dark films or paints that reduce effective intensity or change colour are generally not compliant. If a warrant or roadworthy is on the cards, keep the lenses clear and use compliant bulbs or LEDs.