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Parts for your 2018 Subaru Exiga-Fuel pump

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2018 Subaru Exiga fuel pump — what it does, when to replace, and how it’s serviced

Referencing technical sources, the 2018 Subaru Exiga (sold as the Crossover 7 in its final years) is equipped with an in‑tank electric fuel pump. This is confirmed by the Subaru Factory Service Manual for the Exiga/Crossover 7 (Fuel Delivery and Fuel Pump Control sections for the FB20 engine), Subaru’s FAST electronic parts catalogue listing a complete in‑tank fuel pump module for 2018 Exiga/Crossover 7 models, and independent service data from Autodata/Haynes that show a returnless EFI system with an in‑tank pump and integrated pressure regulation. So yes, the fuel pump is very much relevant on this model.

On the 2018 Exiga, the fuel pump’s job is simple but critical: lift petrol from the tank and feed the engine’s injectors at steady pressure, no matter if it’s idling at the lights or overtaking on the motorway. The pump lives inside the tank as part of a combined module with the strainer, level sender and pressure regulation, which keeps things quiet, cool and reliable.

As part of regular servicing, there’s no fixed replacement interval for the pump itself. It’s considered a lifetime component, but lifetime depends on fuel quality and heat. Good habits help: keep more than a quarter tank to keep the pump submerged and cool, use quality fuel, and don’t ignore early warning signs like hard starting, flat spots under load, a whining from the tank, or lean fault codes. If those show up, a fuel pressure test and pump current draw check are the next steps.

When replacement is needed, access is via the service cover under the rear seat. A competent tech will safely de‑pressurise the system, disconnect the battery, label the evap and fuel lines, and remove the locking ring. The new module should go in with a fresh O‑ring and the ring torqued correctly to prevent vapour leaks. On this Subaru’s returnless setup, the in‑tank filter is not a regular service item