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Parts for your 2009 Toyota Ractis-Tail lights

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2009 Toyota Ractis tail-lights

Tail-lights are absolutely fitted and required on the 2009 Toyota Ractis. This is confirmed by Toyota service and owner literature for the XP100-series Ractis (which lists rear combination lamps with tail/stop functions), and by legal standards that the vehicle complies with, including ADR 13/00 and related lighting rules in Australia, and the NZ Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004. These mirror UNECE Regulations (R48 installation and R7 position/stop lamps), all of which mandate operational rear position lamps on passenger cars.

On a 2009 Ractis, the tail-lights form part of the rear combination lamp assembly, lighting up whenever the park/headlights are on so the car can be clearly seen from behind. They share housing with the brake, indicator, and reverse lamps, and most models from this era use conventional replaceable bulbs. Some markets may feature partial LED elements, so checking the owner’s manual or the marking on the lamp unit is the go-to move.

As part of routine servicing, it’s worth giving the tail-lights a once-over. A quick function test—park lights on, brakes pressed, indicators ticking—catches most issues early. If a bulb’s out, replace it with the correct spec and consider doing both sides so brightness and colour match. For bulb-fit models, avoid touching the glass with bare fingers, oils can shorten bulb life. If the lens is hazy, a gentle plastic-safe cleaner brings back clarity, helping the lamp project a clean, even glow.

Moisture inside the lens is a common gripe on older cars. Check the rear housing seal and the bulb-holder gaskets, if they’re cracked or flattened, swap them out. A light dab of dielectric grease on connectors helps ward off corrosion, especially if the vehicle regularly sees wet commutes or coastal air. If a fuse has popped, confirm the circuit rating before replacing and look for damaged wiring in the tailgate loom—flexing over time can fatigue those wires.

  • Keep lenses clean and free of cracks for best visibility.
  • Use compliant parts (ADR/E-marked) if replacing assemblies.
  • Tighten lamp fasteners gently—over-torque can crack the housing.

Staying on top of tail-lights isn’t just about looks, it’s roadworthy and WOF safety. The Ractis responds well to simple, regular checks that keep it bright, legal, and easy to spot at night.

Popular questions

What bulb type does the 2009 Toyota Ractis use for the tail-lights?
Most 2009 Ractis models use a dual-filament stop/tail bulb in the rear combination lamp, with separate bulbs for indicators and reverse. Exact types can vary by market (and whether the lamp has any LED elements), so the safest approach is to confirm against the owner’s manual or the markings on the existing bulb/lamp.

How can condensation in the tail-light be fixed?
Minor fogging after rain can clear on its own. Persistent moisture points to a tired housing seal, cracked lens, or perished bulb-holder gaskets. Inspect and replace the seals as needed, dry the housing thoroughly, and apply a light smear of dielectric grease on connectors to keep moisture out.

Can aftermarket LED bulbs be used in the Ractis tail-lights?
They can be, but they must be road-legal and compatible with the lamp’s reflector design. Non-compliant LEDs can throw light the wrong way, trigger bulb-out warnings, or fail WOF/roadworthy checks. Choose ADR/E-marked solutions designed for retrofit and verify brightness and colour match left-to-right.

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