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Parts for your 2018 Toyota Crown-Headlights

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2018 Toyota Crown headlights: what they do and how to look after them

Headlights are absolutely fitted to the 2018 Toyota Crown. Technical sources including Toyota’s 2018 Crown launch specifications (S220 series), the Toyota Global Newsroom model brief published at the time, and the Crown Owner’s Manual all list full LED headlamps as standard, with Automatic High Beam and, on higher grades, an Adaptive High-beam System and auto-levelling. Those factory documents make it clear the car runs LED low/high beams with integrated LED daytime running lights and position lamps.

On this model, the headlights do far more than just light the road. The LED setup delivers a crisp, white beam pattern for strong night visibility and better conspicuity in poor weather, while using less power than old-school halogens. Auto-levelling keeps the beam height consistent with load, and the optional adaptive high-beam system can shape light around oncoming traffic, so the driver keeps more forward vision without dazzling others. For Aussie and Kiwi roads—often dark, undulating and long-distance—those features are a real win.

Because the 2018 Crown uses LED modules, there aren’t conventional “bulbs” to swap in the driveway. If output drops, an LED fails, or the lens is damaged, diagnosis usually involves checking the headlamp control unit, fuses, connectors and grounds, then testing the LED driver. Replacement may require a full headlamp assembly, and after that, aiming and sometimes calibration of auto-levelling or adaptive functions with a scan tool. A workshop familiar with Toyota lighting systems is the smart move.

As part of routine servicing—say every 10,000 km or six months—headlights deserve a once-over:

  • Clean the lenses with pH-neutral car wash, avoid harsh solvents that cloud the polycarbonate. Add a UV protectant to slow yellowing.
  • Check beam aim under load, poor alignment causes glare and shortens seeing distance.
  • Test Automatic High Beam/Adaptive High-beam functions and the auto-levelling sweep at start-up.
  • Inspect wiring looms and connectors under the bonnet for moisture, corrosion or chafing, confirm earth points are tight.
  • If there’s condensation inside, look for cracked seals or caps and replace the breather or gasket before it cooks electronics.

Grey-import Crowns are common in Australia and New Zealand, so part numbers can vary by grade. When replacing, match the headlamp assembly by VIN and confirm it supports your car’s AHB/AHS features, then have the beam set on a proper aiming rig. That keeps the driver legal and, more importantly, seeing clearly on night runs.

Popular questions

What headlight type is in the 2018 Toyota Crown?
Most 2018 Crowns use full LED headlamps with LED DRLs, auto-levelling and Automatic High Beam. Upper grades add an Adaptive High-beam System that shapes the beam to reduce glare for other road users. There aren’t traditional halogen bulbs in these units.

Do the headlights need coding or calibration after replacement?
After replacing a headlamp or height sensor, the beam must be aimed, and vehicles with auto-levelling or adaptive high-beam may need calibration via a scan tool. Skipping this can cause glare, dash warnings or poor light distribution.

Can yellowed lenses be restored, or do they need replacing?
Light to moderate yellowing can often be restored with a proper sand-and-seal process using a UV-stable clear coat. If the lens is cracked, heavily crazed, or the internal reflector has degraded, replacement of the assembly is the reliable fix.

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