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Parts for your 2010 Subaru Forester-Water pump
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2010 Subaru Forester Water Pump — What It Does and When To Replace It
Yes, the 2010 Subaru Forester is fitted with a water pump. It’s a mechanical, belt-driven pump on the EJ25 engines used in this model year (both non‑turbo EJ253 and turbo EJ255). This is confirmed by the Subaru Factory Service Manual for the EJ25, Subaru parts catalogues listing the pump assembly for 2010 Forester, and timing component kits from major suppliers such as Gates and Aisin that include a pump specifically for this model. So the water pump is absolutely relevant to servicing and reliability on a 2010 Forester.
On this Forester, the water pump circulates coolant through the engine, radiator and heater core to control operating temperature. Keeping coolant moving at the right rate prevents overheating, detonation, and premature head gasket wear — all big-ticket issues owners would rather avoid. Because it’s driven by the timing belt on the EJ25, the pump’s condition is tied closely to belt service.
Best practice in Australia and New Zealand is to replace the water pump at the same time as the timing belt, typically around the belt interval (often quoted near 100,000–168,000 km or about 5–10 years, depending on service schedule and conditions). Many workshops fit a full timing kit — belt, idlers, tensioner, thermostat and water pump — to avoid paying labour twice and to keep the cooling system reliable for the next cycle. Technical sources such as the Subaru service schedule for EJ25 timing-belt replacement and OE supplier guides support pairing the pump with the belt service.
Between major services, it’s smart to keep an eye on:
- Coolant level and colour under the bonnet (use Subaru Super Coolant/blue long‑life or a spec-approved equivalent).
- Early signs of pump wear: coolant weep from the pump’s relief hole, bearing noise, a sweet smell, or rising temps at idle.
- Hose condition and radiator cap performance.
If a pump starts leaking or the bearing gets noisy, don’t drive it hard or far