Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2010 Toyota Mark x-Suspension bushes

Sort by
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 products

2010 Toyota Mark X Suspension Bushes

Technical sources confirm the 2010 Toyota Mark X (GRX130 series) is fitted with multiple suspension bushes. Toyota’s Technical Information System (TIS) Repair Manual front and rear suspension sections, along with Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) diagrams, depict rubber bushes in the front control arms, rear multi-link arms, sway bar mounts and rear subframe mounts. Reputable aftermarket catalogues also list direct-fit replacement bushes for GRX130 models, reinforcing their relevance on this vehicle.

Suspension bushes on the 2010 Toyota Mark X do the quiet, dirty work that keeps the big rear-drive sedan feeling planted and civil. Pressed into control arms, sway-bar mounts and rear links, these rubber isolators absorb vibration, allow controlled movement and hold alignment steady under braking and cornering. Fresh bushes tame shudder, cut road noise and help tyres wear evenly, which is why they’re a small part with a big effect on how the Mark X drives every day.

Tell-tale signs they’re tired include clunks over bumps, steering wander, a knock when taking off or braking, vague turn-in, and feathered or uneven tyre wear. If there’s brake shudder that isn’t discs, or a thud from the rear when loading the throttle, cracked or oil-soaked bushes are often behind it. The car can still pass a quick glance, yet feel loose on the open road, so a proper inspection under load matters.

As part of normal servicing, it’s smart to inspect bush condition every 20,000 km or annually. Look for splits, perishing, voids collapsing, and any bush that’s weeping or soft from engine or diff oil. Check sway-bar D-bushes for flattening and end-link play. Use a pry bar gently to assess movement, and always re-torque control-arm bolts at ride height to avoid preloading the rubber. If a bush is marginal, replacing in axle pairs keeps handling consistent, and a post-job wheel alignment locks in geometry.

Choosing replacements comes down to use. Genuine-style rubber keeps NVH low and suits daily commuting. High-quality polyurethane sharpens response and lasts well, but can add a touch of vibration on coarse-chip Kiwi and Aussie roads. Many front and rear arms on the Mark X have press-in bushes