Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 2010 Toyota Land cruiser-Brake hose
2010 Toyota Land Cruiser Brake Hose — Purpose, Care and When to Replace
Yes, a brake hose is absolutely relevant and used on the 2010 Toyota Land Cruiser. Technical sources including the Toyota 200 Series (J200) Repair Manual and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for MY2010 (URJ200/VDJ200) specify flexible hydraulic brake hoses at each front caliper, plus a body-to-rear-axle hose and short hoses at the rear calipers. That flexible design is essential to handle steering and suspension movement while keeping brake fluid sealed under high pressure.
On the 200 Series, the brake hose carries pressurised fluid from the rigid lines to the calipers. Because the Land Cruiser’s suspension has plenty of travel and the front end steers, a rigid pipe would crack—so the hose takes up the movement. It also has to play nicely with ABS and stability control, which pulse pressure rapidly. Over time, hoses can harden, crack, chafe, or swell internally. Any of that can lead to a spongy pedal, pulling to one side under brakes, or a dragging brake that runs hot after a drive.
Good servicing practice is to inspect the hoses at every brake service—ideally each 10,000–15,000 km or 6–12 months, and always after serious off-road work. Look for surface cracks, bulges, wetness from leaks, corrosion at the fittings, or any rubbing from lifted suspension or aftermarket wheels. If one hose is suspect, replace in axle pairs. Many techs recommend proactive replacement at around 6–10 years, sooner if the vehicle tows, sees corrugations, beach runs, or high heat.
- Use quality, ADR-compliant hoses that meet SAE J1401.
- Avoid twisting the hose on fitment