Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

CATEGORIES

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2020 Toyota Camry-Coolant

Sort by
Showing 1 - 1 of 1 products

2020 Toyota Camry coolant — what it does and how to look after it

Coolant is absolutely relevant and used on the 2020 Toyota Camry. Toyota specifies a dedicated engine cooling system filled with Toyota Genuine Super Long Life Coolant (SLLC, pink) for all 2020 Camry variants, and hybrid models also have an additional inverter/electric motor cooling circuit. This comes straight from Toyota’s 2020 Camry Owner’s Manual (cooling system requirements) and Toyota’s SLLC product specification.

For the 2020 Camry, coolant does a lot more than stop the engine from getting hot under the bonnet. It carries heat away from the engine, prevents freezing and boil-over, protects aluminium and other metals from corrosion, and lubricates the water pump. The Camry’s hybrid versions rely on coolant not only for the petrol engine but also to keep the power electronics happy, so the correct fluid really matters.

When it comes to servicing, Toyota’s guidance for SLLC is hard to beat: first replacement at 10 years or 160,000 kilometres, then every 5 years or 80,000 kilometres thereafter. That interval applies to the engine loop, and hybrid models typically follow the same schedule for the inverter loop. Always double-check the Owner’s Manual for the exact schedule for the specific trim sold in Australia or New Zealand.

Day to day, it’s worth a quick look at the translucent reservoir when the engine is cold. The level should sit between the LOW and FULL marks, and the fluid should be a clean pink colour. Top-ups should be with Toyota Genuine Super Long Life Coolant (premixed) to maintain the correct protection and chemistry. Avoid mixing different colours or “universal” coolants — that can shorten additive life and reduce corrosion protection. If an emergency top-up is unavoidable, use demineralised water sparingly and have the system checked and corrected soon after.

  • Never remove the radiator cap when hot — serious burn risk.
  • Ask the workshop to vacuum-fill and properly bleed the system, especially on hybrids with electric water pumps.
  • Watch for sweet smells, damp spots under the front, rising temperature, or the heater going cold — all are signs to book it in.
  • Dispose of old coolant responsibly