Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

CATEGORIES

Brands

Light Style

Show More Show Less

Light Type

Colour

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 2014 Toyota Crown-Tail lights

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Showing 1 - 39 of 274 products

2014 Toyota Crown tail-lights: purpose, servicing and replacement

Tail-lights are absolutely fitted to the 2014 Toyota Crown and are required for legal road use. Technical sources back this up: the 2014 Crown owner’s manual and Toyota parts catalogues list rear combination lamp assemblies (tail, stop, indicator, reverse and reflector), and lighting regulations such as UNECE R48 (installation of lamps) and the NZ Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Lighting 2004 mandate rear position lamps. Most 2014 Crown variants use LED rear combination lamps, with some functions (often reverse) still using replaceable halogen bulbs.

On the 2014 Crown, the tail-lights do three big jobs: make the car visible from behind at night or in poor weather, signal braking, and indicate direction changes or reversing. They’re also a compliance item—keeping them working and bright helps the car pass WOF/RWC checks and avoids defect notices. Because many Crowns run LEDs, they light quicker, draw less power and generally last longer than old-school bulbs—but they still need attention to wiring, seals and lenses.

For servicing, a quick check every few months (or at each service) is smart. Look for:

  • Any failed functions: tail, brake, indicator, reverse.
  • Condensation or water inside the lens—usually a sign a seal or housing is compromised.
  • Cracks, hazing or fading lenses that reduce light output.
  • Loose connectors or corroded terminals, a dab of dielectric grease helps keep moisture out.

If a bulb-equipped function has failed, replace the bulb with the correct type and wattage as noted in the Crown’s manual or parts guide. Avoid touching glass with bare fingers—use gloves or a clean cloth. For LED-equipped functions, the repair is typically the whole lamp assembly, if a single LED or internal driver fails, replacing the complete unit is the reliable fix.

Replacement basics: open the boot, remove the trim clips near the lamp area, undo the lamp fasteners, disconnect the wiring connector, and withdraw the lamp straight back. Transfer any bulb holders if required, seat the new lamp evenly on its locating pins, reconnect, and refit fasteners and trim. Tighten fasteners firmly but don’t overtighten—check a service manual for torque values.

Aftermarket lamps should be ADR/UNECE compliant, display bright red rear position and stop lighting, amber indicators, a clear reverse light and built-in reflectors. Non-compliant smoked or overly tinted lenses can fail a WOF/RWC.

Popular questions about 2014 Toyota Crown tail-lights

Are the 2014 Crown’s tail-lights fully LED?
Most 2014 Toyota Crown grades use LED rear combination lamps for tail and stop, and often for indicators. The reverse light may still be a replaceable halogen bulb on some trims. A quick look at the lamp or a check in the owner’s manual/parts guide will confirm the exact setup for a specific vehicle.

Can a cracked tail-light lens be repaired?
Small cracks can sometimes be temporarily sealed to keep water out, but that’s a stopgap. Water ingress can corrode connectors and dim LEDs. The proper fix is to replace the affected lamp assembly to restore full brightness and keep the vehicle compliant.

Will dark or smoked tail-lights pass a WOF/RWC?
Only if they remain compliant: the red tail and stop light must be clearly visible at required distances and angles, indicators must be amber and bright, and reflectors must be present. If the tint reduces output too much or deletes reflectors, the car can fail inspection or be defected.

{ "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "FAQPage", "mainEntity": [ { "@type": "Question", "name": "Are the 2014 Crown’s tail-lights fully LED?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Most 2014 Toyota Crown grades use LED rear combination lamps for tail and stop, and often for indicators. The reverse light may still be a replaceable halogen bulb on some trims. A quick look at the lamp or a check in the owner’s manual/parts guide will confirm the exact setup for a specific vehicle." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Can a cracked tail-light lens be repaired?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Small cracks can sometimes be temporarily sealed to keep water out, but that’s a stopgap. Water ingress can corrode connectors and dim LEDs. The proper fix is to replace the affected lamp assembly to restore full brightness and keep the vehicle compliant." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Will dark or smoked tail-lights pass a WOF/RWC?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Only if they remain compliant: the red tail and stop light must be clearly visible at required distances and angles, indicators must be amber and bright, and reflectors must be present. If the tint reduces output too much or deletes reflectors, the car can fail inspection or be defected." } } ]}