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Parts for your 2018 Toyota C-hr-Wheel hubs
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2018 Toyota C-HR wheel hubs — what they do and when to replace them
Based on Toyota’s technical literature — including the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for the NGX10/AX10 series and the Toyota C‑HR Repair Manual available via Toyota TIS — the 2018 Toyota C‑HR is fitted with wheel hub assemblies front and rear. The rear uses a bolt-on hub and bearing unit with an integrated ABS tone ring, while the front uses a hub supported by a unitised sealed bearing in the steering knuckle. So yes, wheel hubs are very much used and relevant on the 2018 Toyota C‑HR.
The wheel hub is the bit that the wheel actually bolts to. On the 2018 Toyota C‑HR, each hub keeps the wheel centred, supports the vehicle’s weight through a sealed bearing, and works hand-in-glove with the ABS and stability systems via a tone ring or encoder. It’s designed to spin smoothly with minimal friction, so road noise stays low and tyres wear evenly. Because the bearings are sealed from the factory, there’s no greasing or periodic adjustment — when they wear out, the fix is replacement.
There’s no scheduled replacement interval for C‑HR wheel hubs, instead, they’re checked during routine servicing and tyre rotations. Technicians will spin and rock the wheel to feel for rumble or play, and listen for that tell-tale humming that rises with road speed. In Aussie and Kiwi conditions, long highway kilometres, corrugations, and coastal moisture can accelerate wear or corrosion on mating faces, so keeping things clean during brake or tyre work pays off.
- Signs it’s time to replace a hub on a 2018 C‑HR:
- Growling or humming that changes with speed or when steering left/right
- Noticeable play when rocking the wheel at 12 and 6 o’clock
- ABS or traction light triggered by a damaged encoder/tone ring
- Uneven tyre wear despite correct pressures and alignment
Good workshop practice helps hubs live longer. Always torque wheel nuts correctly, avoid hammering wheel studs, and clean the hub-to-rotor and hub-to-wheel faces so everything seats flat. On front hubs, the axle nut preload is critical — use new hardware where Toyota specifies and follow the torque/angle spec from Toyota TIS. If a hub is noisy or loose, don’t delay, a failing bearing can heat up, affect braking via ABS faults, and chew out tyres. Quality replacement hub assemblies that match the VIN (part numbers vary by market) restore that factory-fresh smoothness and keep the C‑HR tracking straight and quiet for many more kilometres.
- Do all 2018 Toyota C‑HR models use sealed hub bearings?
Yes. The 2018 C‑HR uses unitised, sealed bearings. The rear is a bolt-on hub and bearing assembly, the front hub is supported by a sealed bearing pressed into the knuckle.
They’re not serviceable in the old-school way — no repacking with grease — so when worn or noisy, the correct approach is replacement of the assembly as specified by Toyota.
- What symptoms point to a bad wheel hub on a 2018 C‑HR?
A wheel-speed-dependent hum or drone that gets louder when gently loading one side in a lane change is classic. You might also feel roughness when spinning the wheel off the ground, or detect play when rocking it at the edges.
On some failures, the ABS/traction light can pop up if the encoder ring signal goes wonky. Uneven tyre wear and a vague steering feel can also appear as the bearing develops clearance.
- How long does replacement take and what might it cost?
Allow roughly 1–2 hours per corner depending on rust/corrosion and workshop equipment. Rears are typically quicker as they’re bolt-on units, fronts can take longer due to the pressed-in bearing setup.
Parts pricing varies, but owners commonly see a range of roughly AUD/NZD ,200–,500 per hub assembly, plus labour. Using quality parts and correct torque specs helps ensure a quiet, long-lasting result.