FORD Explorer Engine coolant flush

Engine, Fuel & Emissions system·2003–2005 · FORD repair guide

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Engine coolant flush

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AftermarketUS$171US$319
OEM partsUS$222US$463
Labour12 hrs

FORD Explorer — What to know

The Explorer is Ford's mid-size SUV with a broad service network. The 3.5 EcoBoost V6 (2011–2019) is the most popular engine and is generally reliable. Known issues include cabin exhaust fume intrusion on 2011–2017 models and carbon buildup on EcoBoost direct injection engines.

What is this repair?

Plain-English overview

Coolant transfers heat away from the engine and prevents freeze damage; over time it becomes acidic and loses its corrosion inhibitors, accelerating damage to the radiator, water pump and hoses.

Warning signs

How to tell your FORD Explorer needs this repair

  • No specific warning symptoms — this is scheduled preventative maintenance
  • Coolant appears rusty, brown or contains visible floating particles
  • Sweet smell from the engine bay (coolant leaking or close to boiling)
  • Heater not producing warm air in winter (blocked passages)
  • Corrosion visible on hose connections or the radiator cap

Common causes

Why FORD Explorer vehicles need this repair

  • 1.Inhibitor depletion — coolant additives break down over 2–3 years
  • 2.Leaks from hoses, the water pump or radiator diluting the mixture
  • 3.Overheating events accelerating coolant chemistry breakdown
  • 4.Incorrect water-to-coolant ratio allowing freezing or boiling

What affects the price

Why your quote may differ

  • OAT vs HOAT vs IAT coolant type required by the manufacturer
  • Whether the system is fully flushed or only partially drained
  • Coolant volume required by the engine

At a glance

Key facts about this repair

Labour time

1–2 hours

at a typical garage

DIY difficulty

Moderate

Typical parts included

What gets replaced

Engine coolant

Risks of ignoring this

What happens if you delay

  • Engine overheating leading to head gasket failure — one of the most expensive car repairs
  • Warped or cracked cylinder head from sustained thermal damage
  • Sudden breakdown as the engine reaches critical temperature
  • Irreversible internal engine damage the longer overheating continues

Full repair guide

Everything you'd want to ask a trusted mechanic

Click any question below to expand.

The cost varies by year, engine size, and your location. Use the estimator above for an accurate breakdown of parts and labour specific to your FORD Explorer.

Common parts for this repair include: Engine coolant.

Engine coolant flush on a FORD Explorer typically takes 1–2 hours of labour at a garage.

For a FORD Explorer, engine coolant flush is typically needed every 2–5 years or 30,000–50,000 miles depending on coolant type.

A coolant flush involves draining the system, flushing it clean and refilling with the correct coolant type and concentration. Coolant itself costs $20–$50 for most vehicles; the job should take 30–60 minutes. Total cost of $80–$160 is typical. Be sceptical of a full machine flush being recommended on a car with clean, recent coolant — a simple drain-and-fill is often sufficient. More importantly, confirm the correct coolant type is being used for your FORD: mixing OAT, HOAT and IAT coolants causes corrosion and silting that can damage the water pump and radiator.

An independent is the right choice for most FORD vehicles. The critical thing is using the correct coolant type — your FORD owner's manual specifies the standard (OAT, HOAT, G11, G12, G13 etc). Any independent can source the correct coolant. Mixing coolant types causes corrosion regardless of who does the job, so confirm the garage knows the specification for your specific FORD engine. Dealer pricing for a coolant flush is typically 50–80% higher for the same outcome.

Brand matters less than type. FORD (like all manufacturers) specifies a coolant standard, not a brand — but using the wrong type causes real damage. Mixing OAT (orange/red, extended-life) with IAT (green, conventional) or HOAT creates a gel-like sludge that blocks small passages in the heater core and water pump. Always use the type specified in your owner's manual or stamped on the coolant reservoir cap. Quality brands including Prestone, PEAK, Zerex and Febi all produce coolants certified to manufacturer standards — check the label matches the requirement for your FORD.

A top-up adds a small amount of pre-mixed coolant to bring the reservoir to the correct level — appropriate when the level has dropped slightly, usually from minor evaporation. A flush replaces the entire coolant volume, restoring the corrosion inhibitors and freeze protection that degrade over time. Topping up old, degraded coolant with fresh coolant dilutes it slightly but does not restore full inhibitor protection. A proper flush is required every 2–5 years depending on the coolant type, regardless of how many top-ups have been done in between.

Fluid changes are manageable for a home mechanic with basic tools and care taken over correct disposal of old fluid. A garage will typically inspect related components at the same time, which adds value to a professional service over a DIY fluid swap.

Similar vehicles

Engine coolant flush cost on similar cars

Get the exact price for your FORD Explorer

Pick your year and engine below. Instant estimate, no account needed.

Estimates in seconds · Always confirm with a qualified mechanic

Example estimate

Engine coolant flush

Select your vehicle above to get your personalised estimate

AftermarketUS$171US$319
OEM partsUS$222US$463
Labour12 hrs