Brake Pad Replacement
Blueprint for inspecting brake pads, rotors, calipers, and hardware before quoting a pad-only or pads-and-rotors repair.
Use this guide to confirm the failure path before replacement, then move into pricing once symptoms, tests, and root-cause evidence point to the same repair.
Exact labor time and procedure may vary by engine, trim, drivetrain, and vehicle condition.
Load Vehicle (Optional)
Load or adjust vehicle context for guide references and estimator handoff. This does not make the guide a full vehicle-specific procedure.
Common Symptoms
- Squeal, grind, or scraping while braking
- Brake warning light or low pad sensor message
- Longer stopping distance or brake pulsation
- Uneven pad wear side to side
Mechanics Often Inspect
- Inner and outer pad thickness on both sides
- Rotor surface, thickness, scoring, and runout clues
- Caliper slide pin movement and boot condition
- Brake fluid level and visible hose or caliper leaks
Related System Checks
Common Causes
- Normal pad wear
- Sticking slide pins or seized hardware
- Rotor damage or excessive heat spots
- Caliper piston not retracting evenly
Labor Time
Typical labor range based on TorqueMech service data.
Repair Difficulty
Usually straightforward when access is clear, parts are correct, and basic checks confirm the repair path.
Inspection Priority
- Inspect rotor condition and pad thickness first.
- Verify inner and outer pad wear pattern.
- Check caliper hardware movement before quoting pad-only service.
What This Repair Usually Involves
- Measure pads and inspect rotors before quoting the final path.
- Remove caliper hardware, support the caliper, and replace pads and clips.
- Service slide pins and contact points with proper brake lubricant.
- Pump the pedal, verify pedal feel, and road test carefully.
Diagnostic Context
Brake noise and uneven wear should be inspected before choosing pad-only versus pads-and-rotors pricing.
See what problems often lead to this repair
Use code and diagnostic lookup when needed
Common Mistakes
- Replacing pads without inspecting rotor condition
- Letting the caliper hang from the brake hose
- Skipping slide pin service
- Driving before restoring brake pedal feel
Related Symptoms
Use symptom paths when the complaint needs one more inspection step before the repair is estimated.
Commonly Checked With
Mechanics often inspect these nearby parts, fluids, or systems before closing the repair path. Add them to the estimate only when inspection supports it.
Estimate Guidance
- Use pad-only pricing only when rotors, calipers, and hardware pass inspection.
- Quote pads and rotors when scoring, pulsation, rust lip, or thickness concerns are present.
- Inspect seized caliper hardware, slide pins, rotor condition, and brake fluid condition before final approval.
- Add caliper or brake-fluid service only when inspection supports it.
Estimate This Repair
Once the likely fault is confirmed, move from testing to pricing. The estimator helps compare labor, parts, and service context for customer approval or a professional quote.
Estimate Brake Pad Replacement -> Continue EstimateExact labor time and procedure may vary by engine, trim, drivetrain, and vehicle condition.