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Parts for your 2010 Toyota Crown-Tail lights
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LED Autolamps 12V LED Stop/Tail/Indicator Lamp With Reflex Reflector White Background - 150BAR
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Repco 12V LED RearCombination Lamp Stop / Tail / Indicator / Licence Plate Pair 150x80x25mm - RLT150LBL2S3
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Repco 12V LED Rear Combination Lamp Stop / Tail / Indicator Pair 100x100x25mm - RLT100BL2S3
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LED Autolamps Rear combination L/R tail lights with sequential indicator, Chrome, Twin Blister - 355ARWM-2
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LED Autolamps 12V Stop/Tail/Indicator/License Plate Boat Trailer Lamp, Right Side - 207BARL4P
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LED Autolamps Multi Volt Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse/Reflector LHS & RHS Diffused Tail Light - 284ARWM-2
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Repco 12V LED Rear Combination Lamp Stop / Tail / Indicator / Licence Plate Pair 100x100x25mm - RLT100LBL2S3
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Hella DuraLED 12/24V LED Rear Stop/Tail Lamp, Horizontal/Vertical Mount - 2330BULK
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OEX Rear LED Combo Taillight 12V - Stop/Tail/Reverse/Indicator/Reflector - LLX94013
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2010 Toyota Crown tail lights — purpose, care, and replacement
Yes, the 2010 Toyota Crown is fitted with tail lights. Technical references including the Toyota Crown S200-series Owner’s Manual (2008–2012) and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue list the rear combination lamp assemblies for this model, covering tail/stop lamps, indicators, reverse, and number plate illumination. That makes tail lights absolutely relevant to any 2010 Toyota Crown servicing plan.
On a 2010 Toyota Crown, the tail lights do more than just look sharp. They act as rear position lamps so the car is seen at night, brighten for braking to warn following drivers, flash for turn signalling, and help with reversing and plate visibility. Many S200-series trims use LED elements for tail/stop within the rear combination lamp, while indicators and reverse often remain as replaceable bulbs. It’s safety gear first, with a healthy dose of Toyota design baked in.
Because they’re always exposed to the weather, tail lights deserve a quick check at each service or WOF/reg inspection. Look for cracked lenses, faded reflectors, blown bulbs, or LED segments that don’t light evenly. Minor haze on the outer lens can be polished, heavy moisture or water inside needs attention, as it can corrode contacts and upset LED drivers. Always keep the lens clean—dirt dulls the beam and reduces the car’s visibility.
For bulb-type circuits, replacement is straightforward. Access is typically from the boot: peel back the trim, twist the bulb holder, and swap like-for-like. Use the correct wattage and base type specified in the Owner’s Manual or EPC to avoid hyper-flash, CANBUS warnings, or heat damage. If your Crown uses LED tail/stop and a segment fails, the usual fix is to replace the full lamp assembly. Genuine assemblies seal better and match brightness and colour temperature across the rear.
- Switch off lights and disconnect the negative battery terminal before work.
- Handle bulbs with a clean cloth, don’t touch the glass with bare fingers.
- Check and reseat gaskets to prevent future condensation.
- After fitting, test tail, brake, indicator, and reverse functions.
A quick five-minute tail light check every 10,000 km keeps the Crown legal under ADR/NZS lighting rules and, more importantly, keeps it visible to everyone else on the road. If anything looks off—dim section, warning on the dash, or moisture in the housing—sort it promptly and enjoy that tidy Toyota finish the S200 is known for.
Q: Is the 2010 Toyota Crown running LED or standard bulbs for its tail lights?
A: Most S200-series Crowns use LED elements for the tail/stop within the rear combination lamp, while indicators and reverse are commonly replaceable bulbs. Always confirm by checking the Owner’s Manual or the lamp’s backplate in the boot—if there’s no separate stop/tail bulb holder, it’s likely LED. Matching both sides for brightness is key, so use genuine or quality equivalents.
Q: What should be done if there’s condensation in a 2010 Toyota Crown tail light?
A: Light fogging after rain can clear with a warm drive. Persistent moisture means a compromised seal or vent. Remove the lamp, dry it fully, inspect the vent and gasket, and reseal or replace as needed. If corrosion or LED driver damage is present, a complete lamp assembly swap is usually the reliable fix.
Q: Can tail light bulbs be upgraded to LEDs on a 2010 Crown?
A: It’s possible for non-LED circuits like indicators or reverse, but use CANBUS-safe LED bulbs of the correct base and wattage equivalent. Check beam pattern and colour (red behind red lenses, amber for indicators) and ensure flash rate stays legal. For factory LED tail/stop, the upgrade path is a full assembly change rather than a bulb swap.