Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2018 Toyota Crown-Thermostat

Sort by
Showing 1 - 1 of 1 products

2018 Toyota Crown thermostat — purpose, service tips and FAQs

Technical sources such as Toyota’s Repair Manual for the Crown (S220 series) and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue list a wax‑pellet thermostat in the water inlet housing for all 2018 Crown engines, including the 2.0‑litre turbo (8AR‑FTS), 2.5‑litre hybrid (A25A‑FXS) and 3.5‑litre V6 hybrid (8GR‑FXS). So yes — a thermostat is fitted and it’s absolutely relevant on a 2018 Toyota Crown.

The thermostat’s job is to help the engine warm up quickly and then hold it at the sweet‑spot temperature for performance, efficiency and longevity. It stays shut when the engine’s cold to speed warm‑up, then opens in stages to let coolant flow through the radiator as things heat up. That stable temperature keeps fuel economy tidy, cabin heat consistent and emissions in check — especially important on Crown hybrid models where engine on/off behaviour relies on proper coolant temps.

While a thermostat isn’t a scheduled replacement item, it’s smart to assess it during coolant service. Toyota Super Long Life Coolant typically gets its first change at around 160,000 km or 10 years, then about every 80,000 km or 5 years. During those services, a tech should verify that the engine reaches and holds normal operating temperature and that the radiator hoses heat in the right order. Any doubt, replace the thermostat and its O‑ring/gasket as a pair.

Owners and workshops can watch for tell‑tales:

  • Slow warm‑up, weak heater or a P0128 code (stuck open)
  • Overheating, hard upper hose and frequent fan roar (stuck closed)
  • Temperature gauge dancing about, or coolant usage with no external leak

When fitting a new unit, use a quality, engine‑specific thermostat and fresh seal. Clean the mating surfaces, align the jiggle‑pin (if present) per the workshop manual, and tighten the housing bolts evenly to the specified torque. Refill with Toyota pink SLLC pre‑mixed coolant, set the heater to HOT, and bleed air thoroughly — hybrids may need extended bleed time because the engine cycles. After a road test, recheck the level under the bonnet and inspect for seepage. A healthy thermostat helps the Crown feel crisp on a cold start, prevents hot‑day dramas, and keeps hybrid running smooth by allowing electric drive to do its thing without the engine firing up unnecessarily.

Popular questions

How often should the thermostat be replaced on a 2018 Toyota Crown?
There’s no fixed interval