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Parts for your 2013 Toyota Bb-Tail lights

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VHT Nite Shades Black Paint 295ml - SP999
Clearance

VHT Nite Shades Black Paint 295ml - SP999

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CRC Headlight Doctor Headlight Restoration 200ml - 9230
CRC

CRC Headlight Doctor Headlight Restoration 200ml - 9230

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2013 Toyota bB taillights: purpose, care, and replacement

Taillights are fitted to the 2013 Toyota bB. Technical sources such as the Toyota bB owner’s manual for this model series, plus lighting regulations used in Australia and New Zealand (including UNECE Regulation 48 for installation and ADR 13/00 and ADR 49/00 covering rear position and stop lamps), all require operating rear lamps on road-going vehicles. The 2013 bB leaves the factory with integrated rear position (tail), stop, indicator, and reverse lamps.

On a 2013 Toyota bB, the taillights do more than glow red at night—they make the boxy little runabout easy to see from behind and clearly signal braking and turning. That keeps the car compliant and, more importantly, keeps everyone safer in city traffic and on the open road. The bB’s rear clusters typically combine tail and brake functions, indicators, and a reverse lamp behind shaped lenses designed to throw light where it’s most useful.

For owners, keeping those lights in top nick is simple maintenance that pays off. If the bB uses traditional bulbs, they’ll eventually wear out, if it’s an LED-equipped cluster on certain trims or aftermarket upgrades, failure is rarer but usually means replacing the whole assembly rather than just a globe. Either way, visibility, compliance, and avoiding a defect notice or a failed WOF/rego check all ride on those lamps working as intended.

  • Do a monthly walk‑around at dusk: switch on parkers and brakes, and check indicators and reverse. Ask a mate to help or use reflections off a window.
  • Keep lenses clean with car‑wash soap, avoid harsh solvents that can craze the plastic. A quick polish can lift cloudy lenses.
  • If a globe is out, replace in pairs (left and right) so brightness and colour match. Use the exact spec listed on the lamp housing or owner’s manual.
  • Before swapping a globe, turn the lights off and disconnect the battery negative terminal. Handle glass globes with a clean cloth to avoid hot spots.
  • Chasing faults? Check the fuse, then the bulb, then the connector for corrosion. A dab of dielectric grease helps keep moisture out.
  • Thinking LEDs? Choose ADR/UNECE‑compliant units in the correct colour with proper resistors or CANBUS compatibility to avoid hyper‑flash or warnings. Keep beam patterns and brightness legal.

Quality aftermarket or genuine assemblies fit neatly, seal properly against water ingress, and keep the bB looking sharp. A tidy, bright tail end is a small job that makes a big difference on dark and rainy commutes.

Are LED taillight upgrades legal on a 2013 Toyota bB in Australia and New Zealand?

They can be, provided the replacement lamps meet the relevant standards (ADR/UNECE) and are installed correctly with the right colour, brightness, and visibility angles. The car must retain red rear position and stop lamps, amber indicators, and a white reverse lamp.

If converting from halogen to LED bulbs inside a halogen housing, ensure the bulbs are specifically approved for that use. Otherwise, go for complete ADR/UNECE‑marked LED assemblies designed for the bB.

What should be checked first if a 2013 bB taillight stops working?

Start with the simple stuff: the fuse, then the bulb, then the connector and earth. On globe‑type lamps, filament failure is common. On LED clusters, look for moisture inside the housing or a damaged harness.

If multiple rear lights are out at once, suspect a shared earth point or a wiring fault near the tailgate.

How often should 2013 Toyota bB taillight bulbs be replaced?

There’s no set kilometre interval—replace on failure or if output looks dim or patchy. As a rule of thumb, check monthly and consider refreshing pairs before long trips, especially if the bulbs are older.

If upgrading to quality LEDs (where appropriate and compliant), service life is usually much longer, but still keep an eye out for condensation or connection issues.

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