Repairs / Serpentine belt replacement
Serpentine belt replacement: what it should cost in 2026
Serpentine belt replacement — the honest $100–$250 job, plus the tensioner question that decides whether it stays fixed.
What should it cost near you?
Transparent math: labor hours × your state's shop rate + realistic parts range. See exactly how this is computed →
A quote inside this range is ordinary. Above it isn't automatically a rip-off — but every dollar above should map to an itemized line you can question. Below the range: ask what parts brand is being used.
Fair price by vehicle type
At the U.S. national independent-shop average ($110/hr). Pick your state in the calculator above for local numbers; dealers typically run 25–40% higher.
| Vehicle type | Quality aftermarket parts | OEM parts | Labor hours |
|---|---|---|---|
| Economy car (Civic, Corolla, Sentra, Elantra) | $70 – $150 | $90 – $190 | 0.4–0.8 hrs |
| Midsize / family car (Camry, Accord, Malibu, Altima) | $70 – $180 | $90 – $220 | 0.4–1 hrs |
| Crossover / SUV (RAV4, CR-V, Explorer, Highlander) | $90 – $190 | $110 – $230 | 0.5–1 hrs |
| Full-size truck (F-150, Silverado, Ram 1500) | $100 – $200 | $120 – $240 | 0.5–1 hrs |
| Luxury / performance (Lexus, Acura, Cadillac) | $110 – $230 | $140 – $280 | 0.6–1.2 hrs |
| European luxury (BMW, Mercedes, Audi, Volvo) | $120 – $280 | $150 – $340 | 0.6–1.5 hrs |
Where the money goes
For a typical midsize vehicle at an independent shop with quality aftermarket parts — the split between labor and parts. Knowing which half dominates tells you which number to question.
This is a labor-dominated job — roughly 61% of the bill is the time to do it, not the parts. That means shop rate and, especially, quoted labor hours drive your price. Two shops quoting very different totals almost always differ on hours or rate, not parts.
The math, worked out
Every estimate on this page is the same simple formula — labor hours × your shop's rate, plus parts. Here it is for a midsize vehicle at the U.S. average, so you can reproduce it for your own quote:
Labor: 0.4–1 hours × $110/hr (independent) = $40 – $110
Parts: quality aftermarket = $30 – $70
Fair range: $70 – $180
Take it to a dealer at $150/hr and the labor alone rises to $60 – $150 — the same work, a higher rate. That's why comparing quoted hours matters more than comparing totals.
How much your state matters
Shop rates are the half of the bill that legitimately varies by geography. The same serpentine belt replacement on the same midsize car runs about $130 in a low-rate state like Mississippi ($90/hr) versus roughly $180 in a high-rate state like California ($150/hr) — a 32% spread driven entirely by local labor rates, not by the work being different. Use the calculator above to get your own state's figure, and see the full table on the mechanic labor rates by state page.
What moves the price
- Genuinely cheap job on most cars — 15–45 minutes with a tensioner tool
- Some transverse engines route the belt behind a motor mount (this is the 1.5-hour version)
- Stretch-fit belts (no tensioner) need an install tool and are single-use
Lines you may see on the quote
Legitimate in the right circumstances — the "when" column is the test to apply. Paste your full quote into the decoder to check each line at once.
| Line item | Typical cost | When it's legitimate |
|---|---|---|
| Belt tensioner | $80 – $250 | If the pulley is noisy, wobbling, or the arm bounces at idle — a worn tensioner eats new belts. |
| Idler pulley | $40 – $120 | Same logic; spin-check while the belt is off. |
Signs you need this repair
- Squealing at startup or with AC/steering load
- Visible cracks, glazing, or missing ribs
- Battery/charging light plus stiff steering = belt just died
Cost of waiting
One belt usually drives the alternator, water pump, and power steering: when it snaps you lose all three at highway speed. A $150 preventive swap at 80–100k miles is the cheapest insurance in this dataset.
DIY difficulty: Easy
Photograph the routing diagram first (or find it on the radiator support sticker). A breaker bar on the tensioner and it's off.
Common questions
What does serpentine belt replacement cost?
$100–$250 at an independent shop for most vehicles — a $25–$110 belt plus under an hour of labor. If your quote is $300+, a tensioner or hard-access routing should be itemized to justify it.
How often should the belt be replaced?
Inspect from 60k, replace by 90–100k miles or at the first cracks/glazing. EPDM belts wear by rib-material loss rather than visible cracking — a $5 wear gauge (or a shop's) tells the truth.
Is a squealing belt always the belt itself?
Not always — a squeal can be the belt, but it can also be a failing tensioner or a seizing accessory pulley (alternator, idler, AC compressor) that the belt is slipping against. A good shop spins each pulley with the belt off before condemning the belt. If they replace the belt and the noise returns in a week, the pulley was the real cause.
Can I drive with a bad serpentine belt?
Briefly and reluctantly. A glazed, cracked belt can strand you when it lets go — and because one belt usually drives the alternator, water pump, and power steering, losing it means losing charging, cooling, and steering assist at once. If it's visibly frayed or chunking, treat it as this-week, not someday.
Related repairs
Alternator replacement cost in 2026 — why identical cars get $350 and $900 quotes, broken down by parts tier, access labor, and state.
Timing belt replacementTiming belt replacement cost in 2026 — and why the water pump belongs on the same invoice.
Water pump replacementWater pump replacement pricing for 2026 — belt-driven vs chain-driven vs electric, and why the same part is a $300 job on one car and $1,200 on another.
What readers are actually paying
Sources & further reading
Where our inputs come from, and the authorities worth knowing when you're facing this repair. Flat-rate labor times come from the paid industry guides shops use (Mitchell1, ALLDATA, Chilton-class systems), which we can't link; the public sources behind the rest are below.
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Automotive Service Technicians & Mechanics — the wage data behind regional shop-rate differences
- FTC — Auto Repair Basics — your consumer rights on estimates, authorization, and disputes
- NHTSA — Recalls Lookup — check your VIN before paying — the repair may be covered by a recall
How this page is built: the ranges above come from a transparent model — published labor-time ranges for this job by vehicle class, your state's shop labor rates, and realistic parts-price bands (quality aftermarket vs OEM) — compiled 2026-07 from published sources. We're building a reader-submitted quote dataset to refine these ranges further; once enough exist for this repair they appear above. Full detail, including what we don't know, on the methodology page. This is an estimate, not a quote. Have a quote? Decode it and add it to the dataset →