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2016 Subaru Outback 2.5L
Maintenance
2016 Subaru Outback 2.5L Brake Pad Replacement Guide
March 19, 2026
M
mtns Original question
I need to change the brake pads on my 2016 Outback.
Wizuto AI Response
You’re doing a pad swap on a 2016 Outback — that’s a straightforward DIY if you’re careful. Biggest thing that bites people: not getting the slide pins and pad hardware cleaned and lubed, which causes noise and uneven wear. Brakes are safety-critical, so if anything feels sketchy, stop and ask.
What you’ll need
Tools
- Floor jack and jack stands (never rely on the jack alone)
- Wheel chocks
- 19 mm socket (lug nuts)
- 14 mm socket (caliper slide bolts – typical Subaru size)
- 17 mm or 18 mm socket (caliper bracket bolts – verify size on your car)
- Ratchet and a decent breaker bar
- Torque wrench that covers 20–90 ft‑lb range
- C‑clamp or disc brake piston compressor tool
- Flat screwdriver or small pry bar
- Wire brush or small file (for bracket/hardware cleaning)
- Bungee cord or wire hanger (to hang caliper, don’t let it dangle by hose)
Parts & consumables
- Front brake pads (and rear pads if you’re doing all four corners)
- New pad hardware (stainless abutment clips) – often included with pads
- Brake cleaner spray
- Silicone/synthetic brake caliper grease (high-temp, brake-specific)
- Shop rags / paper towels
- Optional but smart: new rotors if yours are thin, grooved, or pulsing
Step-by-step (front pads – rears are almost the same)
-
Prep and lift the car
- Park on level ground, set parking brake, chock rear wheels.
- Crack lug nuts loose (19 mm) with the car on the ground.
- Jack up the front at the front crossmember and support on jack stands at the pinch welds or proper frame points.
- Remove wheels.
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Inspect rotors and hardware
- Look at rotor surface: deep grooves, cracks, blue spots, or heavy lip = consider replacing.
- Check for wetness around caliper (leaks) and torn boots on slide pins.
- If rotors look bad or you’ve got brake pulsation, plan on rotors now, not “later.”
-
Remove caliper and old pads
- Turn steering to give yourself room.
- Remove the 2 caliper slide bolts (usually 14 mm).
- Wiggle caliper off and hang it with a bungee so it’s not hanging by the hose.
- Slide old pads out of the bracket. Note inner vs outer orientation and any shims.
-
Check and service slide pins
- Try sliding the caliper bracket pins by hand. They should move smoothly.
- If sticky, pull them out one at a time, wipe old grease, inspect boots.
- Apply a thin coat of brake caliper grease and reinstall, making sure the boots seat fully.
- If a pin is rusted/pitted badly, replace it.
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Clean and prep the bracket
- If you’re reusing the bracket, pop off the old stainless hardware clips.
- Wire-brush the pad contact areas on the bracket down to clean metal.
- Install new hardware clips from your pad kit.
- Put a very thin smear of brake grease on the areas where pad ears contact the hardware.
- Do not get grease on pad friction surfaces or rotor.
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Compress the caliper piston
- Before pushing pistons back, crack the brake fluid reservoir cap loose under the hood.
- Use a C‑clamp or piston tool with an old pad against the piston and slowly push it fully back into the caliper.
- Watch the reservoir so it doesn’t overflow; if it’s too full, suck a little out with a clean syringe/turkey baster (don’t reuse that for food).
-
Install new pads
- Place new pads into the bracket, making sure they sit fully in the hardware and move freely.
- If pads have wear indicators (squealers), match orientation to the old ones (usually on the inner pad, leading edge).
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Reinstall caliper
- Swing caliper back over the new pads. It should slide on without forcing; if not, piston isn’t fully compressed or pads aren’t seated.
- Install slide bolts by hand to avoid cross-threading.
- Torque slide bolts to factory spec (see below – verify).
-
Repeat on the other side
- Do the same steps on the other front wheel.
- Brakes must always be done in axle pairs.
-
Rears (quick notes)
- Your 2016 Outback uses a drum-in-hat parking brake, so the rear disc caliper pistons push straight in (no twisting like
