Resources

Maintenance Tips

Simple, practical guidance to keep your Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Subaru, Mazda, or Lexus running reliably between visits.

Mechanic working under the hood of a Japanese vehicle
Start here

Your maintenance baseline

If youโ€™re unsure whatโ€™s due, start with these high-impact checks. Weโ€™ll confirm intervals based on your model, mileage, driving conditions, and service history.

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Follow the right interval

Use the factory schedule as a starting point, then adjust for short trips, heavy traffic, heat, or towing.

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Use OEM-quality parts

Filters, fluids, and spark plugs matter on Japanese engines. Quality parts help prevent repeat issues.

Technician changing engine oil during routine service
Checklist

What to check and when

A quick, owner-friendly guide. For exact mileage intervals, follow your ownerโ€™s manual and let us tailor it to your driving habits.

Every month

Check tire pressure and tread, top off washer fluid, and look for new leaks or warning lights.


Every 5,000โ€“7,500 miles

Oil and filter service (interval varies by model and oil type), rotate tires, and inspect brakes and suspension.


Every 15,000โ€“30,000 miles

Replace engine and cabin air filters, inspect belts/hoses, and service brake fluid as needed.


Every 60,000โ€“100,000 miles

Spark plugs (many Japanese engines), coolant service, transmission service, and a full inspection to catch wear items early.

Focus areas

Top tips that prevent big repairs

These are the most common maintenance misses we see. Staying ahead of them helps avoid breakdowns and expensive component damage.

Technician changing engine oil during routine service

Fluids and filters

Use the correct oil grade, replace filters on time, and donโ€™t ignore low coolant or dark brake fluid.

Scheduled Maintenance
Technician inspecting a vehicle on a lift during a maintenance check

Brakes and tires

Squeaks, vibrations, or uneven tire wear are early warnings. Address them before rotors, calipers, or suspension parts are affected.

Brake Repair
Technician working under the hood during an engine bay inspection

Warning lights

A check-engine light isnโ€™t โ€œjust a sensor.โ€ Diagnose early to prevent catalytic converter or drivability issues.

Diagnostics
FAQ

Quick answers

General guidance for Japanese vehicles. For model-specific recommendations, weโ€™re happy to help.

Ask a technician