Toyota Camry Brake Fluid Replacement Cost: $80 to $130 in 2026
Indy shops in the US charge $80 to $130 to flush the brake fluid on any Camry from 2007 onward. Toyota dealers charge $140 to $205. The job is unusually short on a Camry (30 to 45 minutes on a lift) because the reservoir is accessible and the bleed screws rarely seize on a car this commonly serviced. The complication is not the work; it is Toyota's 20,000-mile recommended interval, the strictest in the mainstream auto industry.
Camry brake fluid cost by shop
| Shop type | Cost (US, 2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Toyota dealer | $140 to $205 | Toyota Genuine DOT 3, 1.0 to 1.2 hr labor |
| Lexus dealer (LS / ES shared parts) | $170 to $260 | Same fluid, higher labor and OEM markup |
| Independent mechanic | $80 to $130 | Honda / Toyota indys quote this all day |
| Midas / Pep Boys | $90 to $140 | Frequently coupons under $100 |
| Firestone Complete Auto | $95 to $145 | Bundles with brake inspection |
| Mobile mechanic | $110 to $160 | YourMechanic, Wrench, RepairSmith |
| DIY (fluid + vacuum bleeder) | $22 to $40 | DOT 3 quart $6 to $12, bleeder kit $15 to $25 one-time |
Prices triangulated from RepairPal's Camry-specific estimator, YourMechanic's mobile pricing, regional dealer quotes pulled in May 2026, and BLS automotive-mechanic wage data. Camry pricing is unusually consistent across regions because the car is so common; most shops have a fixed price for the model regardless of trim.
The Toyota dealer's $140 to $205 spread is real, but most Camry owners pay closer to the bottom of that range with a service coupon. Toyota dealer flyers and the official ToyotaOwners app rotate a brake-fluid coupon roughly every quarter, typically 10 to 20 percent off, which lands the dealer ticket at $120 to $170. If you are bringing the car in for the 30k or 60k service, the dealer will often include the flush at a $30 to $50 discount versus a la carte. Asking is free; the coupons exist whether or not the service writer mentions them.
Lexus pricing for the ES (built on the Camry platform and using the same brake hardware) runs $170 to $260 at the Lexus dealer. The actual job is identical, the fluid is the same DOT 3, and the labor time is the same. The premium is Lexus's brand-rate labor (typically $20 per hour over the Toyota franchise) and a more expensive line-item OEM fluid SKU. An independent that handles Lexus regularly will charge Toyota indy money for the same flush.
Camry fluid spec and interval by generation
Camry Hybrid only from 2025 onward. Same brake fluid spec as the gas-only XV70 it replaces.
TNGA chassis. 4-cyl and V6 share the same reservoir and bleed procedure.
Most common Camry in service bays in 2026. Hybrid uses the same fluid spec.
Old enough that bleed-screw seizure is the main cost risk, especially on salt-belt cars.
Toyota has run DOT 3 across the Camry line for over two decades. The brake hardware does not generate the heat that would justify a DOT 4 or DOT 5.1 upgrade in normal use, and the body controllers are tuned for the viscosity of glycol DOT 3. The 2-year / 20,000-mile interval is unique to Toyota and Lexus in this segment; Honda, Nissan, Hyundai, and Kia all publish 3-year intervals for cars in the same price band.
The 2025 Camry transition is worth flagging if you bought the new car expecting different maintenance. The XV80 chassis is hybrid-only in the US market starting with the 2025 model year. Brake fluid spec did not change: still DOT 3, still 2 years or 20,000 miles. The hybrid system means hydraulic brake use drops by roughly 40 percent per mile based on Toyota's own engineering papers, but the calendar interval still applies because moisture absorption does not care how often the brakes are pressed.
For the 6th-generation XV40 (2007 to 2011), the calculation shifts. The car is old enough that a salt-belt example (Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New England) is realistically at risk of seized bleed screws. A snapped bleed screw is a $200 to $400 caliper job, not a flush. Most indys will warn you before they apply real force; if your shop does not, switch shops. A good move for older Camrys is to ask the shop to spray each bleed screw with penetrant, leave the car overnight, and attempt the flush the next morning. That dramatically lowers the snap rate.
Toyota's 20,000-mile interval in context
Toyota's recommended interval is shorter than every other mass-market automaker. The published rationale (from the Toyota US owner's manual) is moisture protection of the ABS hydraulic control unit. The unstated rationale is service-revenue cadence: a Camry coming back to the dealer every 20,000 miles for a $180 flush is a profitable line item.
Whether you follow it literally depends on your tolerance for risk and how the car gets used. A leased Camry under factory bumper-to-bumper warranty should follow the manual to the letter to avoid warranty disputes. An out-of-warranty Camry being driven by the same owner can reasonably stretch to 36 months, matching the Honda and Hyundai intervals, without measurable risk to the ABS module. A Camry in Florida (high humidity, faster moisture absorption) should stay closer to the 24-month mark; a Camry in Arizona (low humidity) can comfortably push to 36 months.
A useful sanity check between flushes: open the reservoir cap on a cool engine and look at the fluid. Light amber is healthy. Medium amber is approaching. Dark brown is overdue. Black means you waited too long and the moisture content is past 3 percent, which is the point at which the fluid's wet boiling point starts to approach normal brake operating temperatures. See the dark-fluid page for the full color reference and what each stage means in dollar terms.
What the bundled-service quote should look like
If your Camry is in for the 30,000-mile service, the dealer's standard quote includes brake fluid replacement as a line item. The full 30k service typically runs $400 to $700 at a Toyota dealer; the brake-fluid line within it is usually billed at $90 to $130, which is competitive with an indy flush. Bundling is fine here. The 60k and 90k services are similar.
If your Camry is in for new pads or rotors, the bundled brake-fluid flush typically runs $40 to $60 on top of the pad / rotor labor, because the technician is already at each corner with the system depressurized. Refusing the flush on a pad job is leaving money on the table; the discrete flush will cost you the full $80 to $130 next visit. See the flush-with-pads page for the full economic case.