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Parts for your 2018 Toyota Vitz|yaris-Suspension bushes

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2018 Toyota Vitz/Yaris Suspension Bushes — What They Do and When to Replace

Yes, the 2018 Toyota Vitz/Yaris is fitted with suspension bushes. Technical references confirm it: Toyota’s workshop information for the XP130-series (2017–2020) specifies a front MacPherson strut layout with lower control arm bushes, plus a rear torsion-beam axle with beam bushes. The model also uses stabiliser (sway) bar D-bushes and link bushes. These items are listed in Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalogue and appear in mainstream service manuals and aftermarket catalogues for the Vitz/Yaris of this generation.

On this Vitz/Yaris, the front lower control arm bushes help keep steering feel tight and wheel alignment steady, while soaking up harshness from coarse-chip roads. The rear torsion-beam bushes let the back end flex just enough for comfort without letting the car wander. Stabiliser bar bushes clamp the bar so it can control body roll without squeaks or play. Together, these rubber components isolate vibration, reduce cabin noise, and maintain precise suspension geometry — which means better tyre life, better braking stability, and a more settled drive.

As part of routine servicing, it’s smart to have the suspension bushes inspected for cracks, splits, perishing, or oil contamination. On cars that see lots of city kerbs, gravel, or coastal conditions, a closer look every 20,000–30,000 km is worthwhile. Typical replacement intervals vary widely (often 80,000–150,000 km), but condition beats kilometres — if there’s movement in the arm, clunks over bumps, vague steering on the motorway, or uneven tyre wear, they’re likely due.

  • Common wear points: front lower control arm rear bush, front stabiliser D-bushes, rear torsion-beam bushes.
  • Best practice: replace bushes in axle pairs, torque bolts at normal ride height, and book a wheel alignment after front-end work. Rear alignment check is still wise to confirm thrust angle.
  • Part choice: genuine-style rubber keeps NVH civilised, polyurethane can sharpen response but may add road noise.

If a bush is torn or oil-soaked, replacement is the go — leaving it too long can chew out tyres or stress ball joints and shocks. A competent workshop will press bushes in/out or fit complete arms where that’s more economical, then recheck alignment so the Vitz/Yaris tracks straight and true.

  • Does the 2018 Toyota Vitz/Yaris actually have suspension bushes?
    Absolutely. It uses front lower control arm bushes, rear torsion-beam bushes, and stabiliser bar bushes — as detailed in Toyota service literature and the Toyota EPC for the XP130-series.
  • How often should the bushes be replaced?
    There’s no fixed kilometre rule. Inspect every service, many cars need bushes somewhere between 80,000 and 150,000 km. Go by symptoms and condition rather than the odometer alone.
  • Do I need a wheel alignment after replacing bushes?
    Yes for front-end bushes — alignment is essential. The rear beam isn’t adjustable, but an alignment check will confirm the thrust angle and overall tracking.
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