HYUNDAI Transmission oil leak repair

Engine, Fuel & Emissions system·HYUNDAI repair guide · All models

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What is this repair?

Plain-English overview

Transmission oil leak repair on a Hyundai varies depending on where the leak is coming from and which model you have. The source matters a lot: a leaking pan gasket on a Tucson or Elantra is a straightforward fix, while a leaking output shaft seal on an all-wheel-drive Santa Fe or a valve body issue on the DCT-equipped models is considerably more involved. Getting the leak source properly diagnosed before any work starts is the most important step, since misdiagnosis leads to repeat repairs.

Warning signs

How to tell your HYUNDAI needs this repair

  • Jerky or hesitant gear changes on dual-clutch transmissions
  • Fault codes specific to a solenoid, actuator or selector position sensor
  • Gear selector moving without engaging correctly
  • Transmission oil contaminated with metal particles
  • Whining or rumbling noise from the gearbox area

Common causes

Why HYUNDAI vehicles need this repair

  • 1.Infrequent gearbox oil changes allowing sludge to accumulate
  • 2.Worn synchronisers from high-mileage gear changes
  • 3.Oil leaks reducing lubricant level and causing dry running
  • 4.Overheating from sustained towing or extreme use

What affects the price

Why your quote may differ

  • Part type — mechatronic units are expensive (€800–€2,000 parts alone)
  • Whether specialist flushing and recalibration is included
  • OEM vs refurbished mechatronic (refurbished available at lower cost)
  • Fluid flush and replacement at the same time

Risks of ignoring this

What happens if you delay

  • Progressive slipping worsening until the car becomes undriveable
  • Damage spreading to the flywheel or pressure plate, significantly increasing repair cost
  • Sudden failure leaving you stranded
  • Inability to select gears if the gearbox or selector mechanism is affected

Full repair guide

Everything you'd want to ask a trusted mechanic

Click any question below to expand.

The cost of transmission oil leak repair on a HYUNDAI varies by model, engine size and parts quality. Use RepairFair's free estimator to get an accurate price for your specific car.

Each HYUNDAI model sits in a different vehicle segment (compact, mid-size, SUV) and has a different engine configuration. Larger, more complex or more premium vehicles require more expensive parts and sometimes more labour time. Select your specific model for an accurate estimate.

Transmission oil leak repair on a HYUNDAI typically takes 1–6 hours of labour. In practice, most garages will complete the job within a half or full working day depending on their schedule.

The biggest variable is fluid type — OEM-specified ATF for many HYUNDAI models costs $15–$30 per litre and the system may hold 8–12 litres. Confirm the correct fluid specification for your exact HYUNDAI model before the service; using the wrong fluid causes shift quality issues and can damage internal components. A drain-and-fill (replacing only what drains by gravity) costs less than a full flush machine service; for regular maintenance, a drain-and-fill is often sufficient. Be wary of a very cheap service that does not use the correct OEM-specified fluid — this is the most common transmission service mistake.

An independent with the correct fluid specification knowledge is the right choice. The critical requirement is using the manufacturer-specified ATF for your HYUNDAI — this information is in the owner's manual and your independent must follow it exactly. Some HYUNDAI transmissions (ZF 8-speed in many BMWs and Range Rovers, DSG units in VAG vehicles) have specific fluid specifications that differ from generic ATF. An independent familiar with HYUNDAI transmission specifications will get this right; confirm before booking by asking what fluid they plan to use.

The specification matters critically. Some HYUNDAI transmissions require OEM-branded fluid or an approved equivalent — using a generic ATF not meeting the OEM approval causes shift harshness or internal damage. Lubegard, Liqui-Moly, Red Line, Ravenol and Pentosin manufacture fluids meeting major OEM approvals (ZF Lifeguard, GM Dexron, Toyota WS, Aisin) — verify the bottle carries the specific approval your HYUNDAI requires. Avoid generic "universal ATF" claims — ATF is not universal and the wrong fluid in some transmissions causes permanent damage within a short driving period.

A fluid service replaces the oil and sometimes the filter — it is maintenance designed to prevent wear. A transmission rebuild involves disassembly, inspection, and replacement of internal clutch packs, seals, bearings and solenoids. A fluid service on a transmission that is already slipping will not fix it; the mechanical damage is already done. However, regular fluid services at 40,000–60,000 mile intervals dramatically reduce the likelihood of needing a rebuild. If transmission problems are already present, a fluid service alone will not resolve them — a diagnosis is needed first to determine whether the issue is fluid-related or mechanical.

Transmission oil leak repair requires specialist tools, precise torque settings and — for timing work — the risk of catastrophic engine damage if done incorrectly. This is not a job for a home mechanic. Use a qualified garage and ask them to show the old parts.

Other makes

Transmission oil leak repair cost on other brands

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