NISSAN Transmission replacement

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

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What is this repair?

Plain-English overview

Transmission replacement involves fitting a remanufactured, used or new gearbox when the existing unit has failed beyond economical repair. It is typically more cost-effective than a full rebuild on heavily worn transmissions.

Warning signs

How to tell your NISSAN needs this repair

  • Complete gear engagement failure or total loss of drive
  • Catastrophic internal failure noise (grinding, clunking)
  • Transmission stuck in one gear or limp mode with multiple faults
  • Excessive case cracking or fluid leaks from the casing itself
  • Rebuild assessed as uneconomical by specialist

Common causes

Why NISSAN 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

  • New vs remanufactured vs used unit (remanufactured preferred for warranty)
  • Transmission type and make — some are significantly more expensive to source
  • Software flashing and adaptation after installation
  • Torque converter condition and whether it is replaced 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 replacement on a NISSAN varies by model, engine size and parts quality. Use RepairFair's free estimator to get an accurate price for your specific car.

Each NISSAN 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 replacement on a NISSAN typically takes 6–18 hours of labour. In practice, most garages will complete the job within a half or full working day depending on their schedule.

Always ask for an itemised quote showing parts cost and labour time separately. Research the cost of the specific parts required online — the part number is often readable from the old component. Compare the labour hours quoted against RepairFair's estimate for your specific NISSAN model and year. A quote that is 20–30% higher than RepairFair's estimate warrants a second opinion. Ask whether aftermarket or OEM parts are being used, and whether a remanufactured option is available — both legitimate choices, but you should always know which one you are paying for.

For most repairs, a reputable independent with experience on NISSAN vehicles is the better value choice — typically 30–50% less in total cost for the same quality outcome. The scenarios where a dealer makes sense are: work covered by a manufacturer or extended warranty, recalls or technical service bulletins requiring dealer-level software, and complex electronic programming that requires proprietary tools not yet available to independents. For mechanical repairs, an independent using quality parts is equivalent to a dealer in terms of outcomes and often exceeds dealer service in the attention given to each job.

Quality aftermarket parts from reputable tier-1 manufacturers are appropriate for most NISSAN repairs. The distinction is between tier-1 aftermarket (Bosch, Denso, Delphi, Gates, SKF, Brembo — brands that supply car manufacturers as original equipment) and budget unbranded parts. Tier-1 aftermarket parts perform identically to OEM and often cost 30–60% less. The components where OEM is genuinely preferable are safety-critical items with tight tolerances (airbag modules, antilock brake modulators), items with NISSAN-specific software coding (ECU, certain sensors), and components where the OEM part has been specifically improved over earlier versions that were prone to failure.

When any system component is replaced, it is worth inspecting nearby components that share labour time. Replacing one part while the relevant area is already disassembled often costs very little in extra labour compared with doing it as a separate job later. Ask your mechanic to inspect adjacent components and report their condition during the repair. Any part that is visibly worn or leaking and is accessible during the main repair is worth addressing at the same time — this is good planning, not upselling, when the mechanic can clearly show you the condition of the component in question.

Transmission replacement 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 replacement cost on other brands

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