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Parts for your 2009 Holden Captiva 7-Tail lights

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2009 Holden Captiva 7 tail-lights

Tail-lights are absolutely fitted and relevant on the 2009 Holden Captiva 7. This is confirmed by the Holden Captiva CG (2009) Owner’s Manual lighting section and the Australian Design Rules—particularly ADR 49/00 covering front and rear position (side) lamps and stop lamps, and ADR 13/00 on the installation of lighting devices. GM’s service information for the CG/CJ Captiva platform also details the rear combination lamp assembly and bulb specifications, so there’s no doubt this model uses tail-lights as standard equipment.

On the Captiva 7, the tail-lights sit high on the rear quarters and tailgate, making the vehicle easy to spot at night or in rough weather. They’re part of a rear combination lamp that handles tail (rear position), brake, indicator, and reverse functions. Typically, the stop/tail uses a dual‑filament 21/5W bulb, switching between brighter brake and lower‑intensity tail modes. They illuminate automatically with the parkers or headlights, including when the auto‑light function is active.

Keeping the Captiva’s tail-lights healthy is simple and saves hassles at WOF/regos. A quick walk‑around once a month does the trick—check both red tail lamps are even, the brake lamps pop brighter when the pedal’s pressed, and indicators and reverse lights behave normally. If one side looks dim or patchy, suspect a tired bulb or a dodgy earth in the lamp holder.

Bulb changes are straightforward: open the tailgate, pop off the small trim access panel, undo the lamp fasteners, and carefully pull the lamp straight back. Twist out the bulb holder, swap in the correct spec bulb (commonly a dual‑filament 21/5W), avoid touching the glass with bare fingers, then reassemble and test. If upgrading to LEDs, choose ADR‑compliant, CANbus‑friendly units in the correct colour to avoid bulb‑out warnings or glare issues.

A few extra tips help the Captiva’s tail-lights go the distance:

  • Replace bulbs in pairs so brightness stays matched left to right.
  • Inspect the foam gasket and vents to stop moisture fogging the lens, light mist usually clears after a drive, but pooling water means the seal needs attention.
  • Clean lenses with mild car wash—harsh solvents can haze the plastic.
  • If lights are dead on both sides, check the “TAIL”/“PARK” fuse in the appropriate fuse box per the Owner’s Manual.

Many SUVs can fatigue the tailgate wiring over time, if a Captiva’s tail-light is intermittent, gently flexing the loom while testing can point to a break that needs repair.

What bulb type fits the 2009 Holden Captiva 7 tail-lights?

Most use a dual‑filament 12V 21/5W bulb for the stop/tail function in the rear combination lamp. Always confirm against the Owner’s Manual or the marking on the bulb holder before purchase, as trim levels and market variants can differ.

Are LED tail-light bulb upgrades legal on a Captiva 7?

They can be, provided the LED replacements are ADR‑compliant, the correct colour (red for stop/tail), and don’t dazzle. Use CANbus‑compatible units to avoid bulb warnings. If unsure, stick with quality halogen bulbs and keep the lenses clean for best visibility.

Why do my Captiva’s tail-lights keep blowing bulbs?

Common culprits are vibration, a corroded bulb holder, moisture inside the lamp, or voltage spikes from a poor earth. Check the socket for green corrosion, ensure the lamp seals are intact, and verify the earth connection is clean and tight. Replacing the bulb holder or gasket often fixes repeat failures.

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