Brake pads OEM Mazda or OEM Chevrolet
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
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 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.
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.
Not a classic. I had an ‘84. First brand new car. It was a surprisingly good and cheap car for when I went to uni. Had to replace the brakes often. Thought it was the cheap car. In retrospect it was likely my driving habits.
The brakes on that thing were absolutely horrible. If you had to panic stop it really was a panic. I never felt that sob was going to stop.
A couple of months after purchase the breaks starting squeeking and a 1 1/2 years later they haven’t stopped. I have had the front ones replaced but I keep getting told it is due to no copper in the break pads anymore - I call BS to that. I also had to get a faulty sensor replaced for the front end because it was causing my car to abruptly stop when I attempted to pull off from a parked position. It was thinking something was in front of me so the front end collision thing was kicking in. I’ve also had to get the fuel injectors replaced because they went bad while in a road trip this summer. Luckily we were almost back home instead 800 miles away still. Currently waiting for rear breaks to come in so those can be replaced to hopefully stop this squeak.
Cx5 2024, one year old and the brakes are completely shot and need to be replaced. I was quoted like 1.5k and the manufacturer only offered $500 discount on the new brakes. I’m honestly appalled.
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Which brake pads to choose — OEM Mazda or OEM Chevrolet?
If choosing brake pads across many manufacturers, check the part ranking. If your choice is down to two brands, the PartReview part comparisons help.
We compare brake pads across these categories:
- PR Score.
- Overall ranking.
- Vote balance.
- Average rating.
- Number of reviews.
- Feature ratings.
- Car owners’ choice.
Which brake pads are better — OEM Chevrolet or OEM Mazda?
In March 2026 on PartReview, brake pads OEM Mazda were overall better than OEM Chevrolet.
- OEM Mazda received a PR Score of 64 out of 100, and OEM Chevrolet scored 51 point.
- OEM Mazda ranked 29 in the overall ranking, and OEM Chevrolet ranked 44.
- The average rating is higher for OEM Mazda (3.4) than for OEM Chevrolet (3.1).
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Brake pads OEM Mazda have better feature ratings than OEM Chevrolet:
- Braking - owners believe, that by this property OEM Mazda does not differ from OEM Chevrolet.
- Dust - drivers claim, that this property for OEM Mazda is outperforms OEM Chevrolet.
- Noise - reviews suggest, that this property for OEM Mazda is preferred to OEM Chevrolet.
Which brake pads are more popular — OEM Mazda or OEM Chevrolet?
In March 2026 on PartReview, brake pads OEM Mazda were overall more popular than OEM Chevrolet.
By vote balance, brake pads OEM Mazda surpassed OEM Chevrolet:
- For OEM Mazda, the ratio of positive (124) to negative (67) votes is 57 votes.
- For OEM Chevrolet, the ratio of positive (50) to negative (47) votes is 3 votes.
By number of reviews, brake pads OEM Mazda surpassed OEM Chevrolet:
- For brake pads OEM Mazda there are 59 reviews: 32 positive, 14 neutral, 13 negative.
- For brake pads OEM Chevrolet there are 30 reviews: 12 positive, 7 neutral, 11 negative.
Which brake pads do car owners prefer — OEM Mazda or OEM Chevrolet?
In March 2026, according to PartReview, these manufacturers led the same number of car-specific ratings:
OEM Mazda are chosen by owners of cars such as: Mazda 2, and others.
OEM Chevrolet are chosen by owners of cars such as: Chevrolet Silverado, and others.
Other comparisons of brake pads
If this comparison didn’t fully answer your question, there are many others on PartReview.
For example, comparisons of brake pads OEM Mazda with: EBC, POWER STOP, Akebono, Hawk Performance, Brembo, Ferodo, OEM Volkswagen, Bosch, STOPTECH, Carbotech.
Also available: comparisons of brake pads OEM Chevrolet with: EBC, POWER STOP, Akebono, Hawk Performance, Brembo, Ferodo, OEM Volkswagen, Bosch, STOPTECH, Carbotech.
You can also see who is better among other brake pads manufacturers: EBC or POWER STOP, EBC or Akebono, EBC or Hawk Performance, Brembo or EBC, Akebono or POWER STOP.