Reviewing the Carfax, it was a rental car for about 50k and then it was a personal car for the next 53k. Both seem to have kept up with maintenance decently as far as oil and filter changes go, but not much else. I didn't see any rust on the bottom, it drives smooth, suspension still seems good, and the dealership replaced the brakes (and put nitrogen in tires so the car goes 1000000x faster).
I do my own work at times and replaced brakes and rotors on my car for less than $200 in parts in about three hours of work. if I’d worked smarter it would’ve been two.
I love my 2017 Yaris IA, really a Mazda 2 made in Mexico, now at 180k miles and still purring like a kitten. No part failures, just front brake pads
I bought my car in 2020, its a 2015 Mazda. Bought it with 92,000 miles currently has 118,000. At this point I have had break pads replaced twice [last time in the beginning of 2024] and rotors replaced once [in 2022]. I took my car to a mechanic in December 2024 and he said breaks looked fine [took it in for another issue]. In May 2025 the car started making a squeaking noise when breaking. I know I should have brought it in then but I am flat broke, I had no money to spend. I have been driving it like that since then. The car runs fine otherwise, I have no problem with breaking [no input lag] and no vibrations on the break pedal.
OEM ceramic brake pads can last 60k to 90k miles.. But they're not that expensive if you change them yourself. Very easy on Mazda, best changed at about 50k miles of normal driving, before they wear too much more, to keep quality OEM rotors for longer.
I bought a well maintained 2014 Mazda 3 hatchback with 60k miles two years ago for $8500. I’ve done rear and front brakes, as well as a rear wheel bearing in that time.
Could be the brakes. My wife's CX-5 smells like that, too. I think one of her slide pins probably seized and needs to be lubricated. Full brake job will be done in the spring. 35K miles or so. I've found that the road salt here just murders Mazda OEM brakes. We've had the same experience with Honda, as well.
9 years working at Mazda and also a master tech, to me always oem fluid. No matter what, I for everything matter in fact. Seen lots of after makers stuff and even brake pads.
Just replaced acc drive belt, plugs and brake pads. One of the easiest cars to fix I've ever worked on. Overall, best car I've ever had.
Mazda 6 Wagon Turbo Diesel.
I'm driving it into the ground ???? but loving every km I drive.
Brakes are the next job, I'm considering an upgrade to slotted rotors and better pads.
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What we know about OEM Mazda brake pads
The brand is registered in Japan.
In March 2026, PartReview users have a mixed opinion of OEM Mazda brake pads.
PR Score — 64 out of 100, based on 59 reviews and 191 vote. 32 positive reviews, 14 neutral reviews, 13 negative reviews. Average rating — 3.4 (out of 5). Vote balance: 124 up, 67 down.
In the ranking of the best brake pads this part is at position 29, behind Zimmermann and Mintex , but ahead of DIXCEL and JURID.
Users also evaluated the qualities of OEM Mazda brake pads:
- Braking - firm, confident deceleration when pressing the pedal - rated ambivalently. 3.3 points out of 5.
- Noise - squeal or screech while braking - rated negatively. 2.3 points out of 5.
- Dust - wheels get dirty quickly with dark brake dust - rated ambivalently. 2.7 points out of 5.
Brake pads OEM Mazda in car-specific ratings
See which car brands and models owners choose OEM Mazda brake pads for. Below are car-specific ratings where this part is in the Top-3:
Brake pads OEM Mazda in comparisons
There are 43 comparisons of OEM Mazda brake pads with other manufacturers on PartReview.
In particular, see which brake pads are better: OEM Mazda or GALFER, OEM Nissan or OEM Mazda, OEM Mazda or OEM KIA, OEM Mazda or OEM Mercedes, OEM Mazda or DIXCEL .