Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 2015 Toyota Hilux-Radiator
Nulon Long Life Green Coolant Concentrate 5L - LL5
Fitment Notes:
Nulon Pro-Strength Extreme Cooling System Flush & Degreaser 500ml - PSCSF
Fitment Notes:
Explore 4WD & Adventure
Loctite 620 High Strength High Temp Retaining Compound 50ml - 235288
Fitment Notes:
Halla Climate Control Radiator OE Quality - 25310-24702
Fitment Notes:
2015 Toyota HiLux Radiator — what it does and how to look after it
A radiator absolutely is used on the 2015 Toyota HiLux. Toyota’s Owner’s Manual and workshop Repair Manual describe the HiLux’s liquid-cooled engine and radiator, and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue lists a “Radiator Assy” for 2015 HiLux variants (diesel and petrol, manual and auto). Popular service guides such as Haynes/Gregory’s for HiLux 2005–2015 also cover radiator maintenance and replacement, confirming it’s a standard fit item.
On a 2015 HiLux, the radiator’s job is to dump engine heat into the air so the ute can hold the right operating temperature whether it’s crawling a rutted track, towing a trailer, or punching into a summer northerly. Coolant flows through the engine, absorbs heat, then passes through the radiator’s fine tubes and fins where an engine-driven fan and/or electric fans pull air to carry that heat away. Many automatic models also route transmission fluid through an internal cooler in the radiator tank or an auxiliary cooler nearby, keeping the auto happy on long climbs and beach runs.
Keeping the radiator in top nick is cheap insurance against overheats, blown hoses, and head gasket dramas. Use the correct Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink, premixed) and stick to the change interval in the Owner’s Manual (commonly long-life—often up to around 160,000 km for the first change, then shorter intervals thereafter, but always follow your market’s schedule). Under the bonnet, look for crusty pink/white deposits, damp tanks, bent fins, or a weeping radiator cap. If coolant looks brown or oily, it’s time for a proper flush and a closer look.
- Service pointers: replace swollen or hard hoses and dodgy clamps, and inspect the thermostat and water pump when you’re in there.
- Radiator cap: swap it if the seal’s cracked or the spring feels weak—wrong pressure can cause boil-over.
- Autos: check the trans cooler lines at the radiator, any damage or corrosion is a risk for coolant/ATF cross-contamination.
- Flush and fill: drain the old coolant, flush with clean water until it runs clear, then refill with the correct Toyota premix. Bleed air with the heater on hot and a spill-free funnel, and verify fans cut in after the thermostat opens.
- Replacement: choose a quality OEM or reputable aftermarket alloy/plastic unit. Refit the shroud, ensure fan clearance, and torque mounts properly so the core isn’t stressed on corrugations.
Sort small leaks early, watch the temp gauge on hot days or when towing, and the HiLux radiator will give years of trouble-free cooling across Aussie and Kiwi conditions.
Does a 2015 HiLux have a radiator?
Yes. Every 2015 HiLux engine variant is liquid-cooled and uses a front-mounted radiator. This is documented in Toyota’s Owner’s Manual cooling system specs, the workshop Repair Manual (Cooling/Radiator sections), and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue, which lists the radiator assembly for those models.
What coolant does a 2015 HiLux use, and how often should it be changed?
Toyota specifies Super Long Life Coolant (pink, premixed). It’s formulated to protect alloy cores and mixed-metal systems common in HiLux. Change intervals vary by market and engine, so follow the Owner’s Manual. Typical guidance is a long first interval then shorter subsequent intervals—don’t mix coolants and never top up with plain water unless it’s an emergency.
Is it safe to drive with a leaking HiLux radiator or to use stop-leak?
Driving with a coolant leak risks overheating and expensive engine or transmission damage (on models with an in-radiator ATF cooler). Stop-leak is a temporary band-aid at best and can clog fine radiator passages. If you spot a leak, top up as needed, keep trips short, and repair or replace the radiator promptly.