Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

CATEGORIES

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2019 Ford Kuga-Oil pump

Sort by
Showing 1 - 1 of 1 products

2019 Ford Kuga oil pump — what it does and how to look after it

Yes, a 2019 Ford Kuga uses an engine oil pump. Technical sources including Ford’s Workshop Manual (TIS) for the 2017–2019 Kuga (Engine Lubrication section) and OEM parts catalogues for the 1.5L EcoBoost petrol and 2.0L Duratorq TDCi diesel list a crankshaft-driven oil pump for these engines. Independent service references, such as Haynes coverage for Kuga/Escape (2013–2019), also include oil pump removal and installation, confirming it’s a fitted component.

The oil pump’s job is straightforward but critical: it pressurises and circulates engine oil so bearings, camshafts, turbochargers and timing components stay lubricated and cool. On the 2019 Kuga’s engines, the pump is driven off the crank and draws oil through the pick-up and strainer, pushing it through galleries and the filter. Without steady pressure, metal parts overheat and wear, leading to expensive failures.

During routine servicing, there’s no scheduled replacement for the oil pump. It’s designed to last the life of the engine when the correct oil and intervals are followed. What matters most is clean, specification-correct oil and a quality filter. Owners should stick to the service interval in the handbook (or sooner if doing lots of short trips), and always use the viscosity and Ford WSS specification listed for their exact engine and climate.

Good workshops will keep an eye out for early signs of trouble:

  • Low oil pressure warning or flickering oil light at hot idle
  • Top-end ticking, chain rattle on start-up, or louder-than-usual turbo noise
  • Metallic debris in the sump or filter

If any of the above appear, a mechanical oil pressure test and inspection of the pick-up strainer are smart first steps. Sludge, sealant debris, or a split pick-up O-ring can mimic a failing pump by starving it of oil.

Oil pump replacement on a 2019 Kuga isn’t a quick driveway job. Access typically requires lower sump removal and front cover work