-3
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18
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-3
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18
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Take it to a Toyota dealership and change your own cabin filter (it's the easiest thing to do)
I change my oil+filter every 5k, engine+cabin filter every 15k, and CVT Drain and Fill every 60k (just once so far) and have not noticed anything weird or concerning.
You ca replace your cabin air filter yourself and save yourself the money. I just replaced mine it’s like 4 screws but I must warn it’s a pain in the ass but it’s very doable.
I personally buy it direct from the dealer, it is $45, but fits perfectly
Oh and there was evidence of a rodent’s nest in the cabin filter.
Be wary of Amazon, I ordered genuine Toyota cabin and engine air filters two years in a row, the second year the filter was noticeably lighter, cheaper feeling. I suspect a counterfeit imitation that has only half the filter material
This happened to us with 2023 sienna after a dealers oil change !!! It turns out that they didn't close air intake filter cabin correctly. We were drive up to Canada at the time. We had to stop time to time to stop the warning. Check the air filter cabin and make sure it secure.
Not a mechanic but have to be because I have to keep our cars on the road. I'll tell you what the bastard that decides where cabin filters need to be. I want 5 minutes alone in a room with their ass. In my wife's Nissan I have to lay on the drivers floorboard upside down with half my body out of the car on the ground to gain access to the side panel that's next to the gas pedal. From there you have to pull out this accordion looking filter element out of it's chamber that is seemingly too small for it and once your back is killing you and all the blood has rushed to your head you have to somehow shove the new one in that isn't as old and flexible without passing out. As a 40 year old overweight dude it kills me.
Nissan cabin filters being underneath the dash. My back and neck hurt too much for that shit man. Also their transmissions, because duh.
And somehow its 50 to 70 bucks or whatever to change the cabin filter but they already took it out to show me and they put it back.... which is why I change oil myself....
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If choosing cabin filter across many manufacturers, check the part ranking. If your choice is down to two brands, the PartReview part comparisons help.
We compare cabin filter across these categories:
In March 2026 on PartReview, cabin filter OEM Nissan were overall better than OEM Toyota.
Cabin filter OEM Toyota and OEM Nissan were equally popular according to data in March 2026.
By vote balance, cabin filter OEM Nissan surpassed OEM Toyota:
By number of reviews, cabin filter OEM Toyota surpassed OEM Nissan:
In March 2026, according to PartReview, cabin filter OEM Toyota and OEM Nissan have not taken top places in car-specific ratings. You can help by adding your review about these manufacturers.
If this comparison didn’t fully answer your question, there are many others on PartReview.
For example, comparisons of cabin filter OEM Toyota with: Mann, K&N, Fram, Tesla, Bosch, OEM Volkswagen, Wix, OEM FORD, OEM Mazda, OEM Honda.
Also available: comparisons of cabin filter OEM Nissan with: Mann, K&N, Fram, Tesla, Bosch, OEM Volkswagen, Wix, OEM FORD, OEM Mazda, OEM Honda.
You can also see who is better among other cabin filter manufacturers: Mann or K&N, Mann or Fram, Fram or K&N, Tesla or Mann, Tesla or K&N.