All I can say is that the belt in this picture is 1000x better and will probably last longer than any non Volvo OEM pieces of garbage you’d buy off the jungle sales app. Heck those might not even get you back home.
I bought the same 2012 S60 but a T5 for $5000 in August with 124k miles. It was a single owner vehicle with great maintenance records and my mechanic gave it a once over. I had to replace the timing belt and will probably need to replace the AC compressor next summer. I expect you'll need to do the timing belt too, and maybe some other things noted in the service manual, but even with $4k of work, you'll be well below your budget. I honestly smile every time I drive it, it's a blast.
I have had to replace timing belts in two of my cars. One was a Volvo V40 and the other a Honda Accord.
Nako hindi na ako bibili ng Volvo! Sirain pala mga timing belt nun.
I forced him to take it to my current indy Volvo garage and they gave him a huge lost of everything wrong with it, including a timing belt and fan belt. It had the distinctive whisp/chirp of worn belts.
As the title says, I changed my timing belt today. I replaced the timing belt, tensioner, idler pulley, serpentine belt, and serpentine belt tensioner. All replacement parts were OEM Volvo. There are two noteworthy cracks that go all the way across the belt and tiny cracks all over.
I know I’m in the UK but a Volvo dealership changed the timing belt, auxiliary belt and kit last year on my V60 D5 and I had change from £300.
I have a 2009 C30 with 80k miles and I just did the timing belt and serpentine belts. The timing belt had noticeable cracks and the tensioner was pretty worn out. Better to get it done and spend the money now than have it snap and have a bricked car.
Mine has been unreliable. The timing belt blew, both lower control arms and shocks needed to be replaced, and also both wheel bearings. Just my experience, I got mine at 130k and I'm at 155k now. Im getting rid of it. \n\n\nSo if anyone wants a c30 with a ton of work done feel free to message me lol. Its perfectly good now, fun to drive and I bet thats about everything that needed to be replaced.
I have a 2007 S60 and the timing belt was replaced by a non-specialist soon after I purchased it. The tension on the belt has to be just right, and the non-specialist mechanic way over-torqued it. Had I not noticed the issue and taken the car to a specialist, it could have pulled the engine apart.
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What we know about OEM Volvo timing belt
The brand is registered in Sweden.
In March 2026, PartReview users have a mixed opinion of OEM Volvo timing belt.
PR Score — 58 out of 100, based on 11 reviews and 34 votes. 6 positive reviews, 1 neutral review, 4 negative reviews. Average rating — 3.3 (out of 5). Vote balance: 20 up, 14 down.
In the ranking of the best timing belt this part is at position 11, behind DAYCO and Contitech , but ahead of OEM Subaru and OEM FORD.
Users also evaluated the qualities of OEM Volvo timing belt:
- Noise - a steady whine or rustle is heard from the timing belt area - rated negatively. 1 point out of 5.
- Visible wear - cracks, missing teeth, or oil contamination seen on the belt - rated ambivalently. 2.5 points out of 5.
- Starting - engine starts poorly or pops/backfires from disturbed timing - rated negatively. 1 point out of 5.
Timing belt OEM Volvo in car-specific ratings
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Timing belt OEM Volvo in comparisons
There are 12 comparisons of OEM Volvo timing belt with other manufacturers on PartReview.
In particular, see which timing belt are better: OEM Volvo or Contitech, OEM Volvo or OEM Audi, DAYCO or OEM Volvo, OEM Honda or OEM Volvo, OEM Volkswagen or OEM Volvo .