BrakeFluidReplacementCost
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2026 / US RetailDOT 3Glycol-based

DOT 3 Brake Fluid Cost: $6 to $12 per Quart in 2026

A 32-ounce bottle of Prestone or Valvoline DOT 3 brake fluid sells for $7 to $9 at AutoZone, O'Reilly, Walmart, and Amazon in 2026. Twelve-ounce bottles run $5 to $7. OEM-branded fluid (Honda Genuine, Toyota Genuine, ACDelco) is the same DOT 3 chemistry in a different label, sold at the parts counter for $9 to $16 per bottle. DOT 3 is the most common spec on the US road and remains the standard fluid for the bulk of Honda, Toyota, Chevy, Subaru, and Ford vehicles built before 2021.

Retailer pricing (2026)

DOT 3 brake fluid brand-by-brand pricing

Brand / SizeAutoZoneO'ReillyWalmartAmazonNotes
Prestone DOT 3 (12 oz)$5.49$5.79$5.29$5.99Most common store-shelf option
Prestone DOT 3 (32 oz / 1 qt)$7.99$7.99$7.49$8.49Best per-ounce value at any retailer
Valvoline DOT 3 (12 oz)$5.99$6.29$5.79$6.49Frequently in stock at quick-lubes
Valvoline DOT 3 (32 oz)$8.49$8.49$7.99$8.99Workshop standard
Castrol GT LMA DOT 3 (12 oz)$7.99$8.29$6.99$7.79Low Moisture Activity, slightly slower water absorption
AC Delco DOT 3 (12 oz)$8.99$9.49n/a$9.49GM OEM spec; sold at GM parts counter
Honda Genuine DOT 3 (12 oz)n/an/an/a$14.99Honda parts counter only; functionally same as Prestone
Toyota Genuine DOT 3 (12 oz)n/an/an/a$15.49Toyota parts counter only; same spec as Prestone

Prices spot-checked May 2026 across the four major US retail channels. Pricing is national-list at the time of capture and may vary by store and by promotional period. The four-channel cross-reference is meant to show the spread you can expect rather than the exact penny you'll pay this week. Sources: AutoZone brake fluid catalog, O'Reilly Auto brake fluid catalog, Walmart automotive section in-store pricing, and Amazon search results filtered to brake fluid.

The cheapest per-ounce option at every retailer is the 32-ounce Prestone or Valvoline bottle, which is also the right size for a complete flush on most US cars (system capacity 0.7 to 1.2 quarts means you need at least 1.5 quarts of fluid to push the old stuff out). If you only need a top-off, the 12-ounce bottle is correct.

OEM-branded fluid (Honda Genuine, Toyota Genuine, ACDelco, Mopar) commands a 50 to 100 percent price premium for chemistry that is functionally identical to Prestone or Valvoline. The premium pays for the brand label, the parts-counter distribution channel, and the warranty-claim-comfort that comes from using the manufacturer's explicitly-named fluid. If your car is in warranty and you're paranoid about a future warranty claim, paying the premium is rational; if it's out of warranty, the premium is pure margin and any quality DOT 3 is fine.

Vehicle compatibility

Which cars take DOT 3

MakeYears / specCommon models
Honda / AcuraAll years (DOT 3 spec)Civic, Accord, CR-V, Pilot, Odyssey, MDX, RDX
Toyota / LexusMost cars 2000+ (some Lexus DOT 4)Camry, Corolla, RAV4, Highlander, Tacoma, Tundra (older)
Chevy / GMCMost cars 1999+Silverado, Tahoe, Equinox, Cruze, Malibu
FordMost cars to 2020 (DOT 4 from 2021)F-150 (to 2020), Mustang (older), Escape, Explorer (older)
SubaruAll yearsOutback, Forester, Impreza, Crosstrek, Ascent
Nissan / InfinitiMost cars (some Infiniti DOT 4)Altima, Sentra, Rogue, Pathfinder
Hyundai / KiaMost cars (some DOT 4)Elantra, Sonata, Tucson, Sorento
MazdaMost carsMazda3, Mazda6, CX-5, CX-9

The safest way to know what your car needs: look at the reservoir cap. The cap is stamped with the required DOT spec (3, 4, 4 LV, or 5.1). If the stamp is illegible, check the owner's manual; brake fluid type is in the maintenance section, typically under fluids and capacities. Don't guess.

The 2021 transition: Ford moved from DOT 3 to DOT 4 across most of its lineup with the 2021 model year, driven by the electrification of the F-150 (PowerBoost and Lightning) and the higher boiling-point margin needed for those configurations. Pre-2021 Fords run DOT 3; post-2021 Fords run DOT 4. The reservoir cap will tell you which.

DOT 3 is also the right top-up choice for any car already running DOT 3 in the system. If you're only adding a small amount of fluid to bring the reservoir to MAX, use the spec already in the system. Mixing DOT 3 and DOT 4 is chemically safe but you should know which you started with.

When to consider upgrading from DOT 3 to DOT 4

Upgrading from DOT 3 to DOT 4 is chemically safe and a $1 to $3 per quart uplift. The case for the upgrade is straightforward: a 45F bump in dry boiling point margin (446F vs 401F) and roughly 27F at the wet boiling point (311F vs 284F). That margin matters in three real-world situations.

First, mountain driving. A Honda CR-V loaded with a family of four descending Loveland Pass or the Smoky Mountains will get its brake fluid past 300F on the way down. Fresh DOT 3 handles this without issue; 3-year-old DOT 3 with 3 percent moisture can be near its wet boiling point of 284F at this temperature. DOT 4's 27F wet-boil margin is meaningful here.

Second, towing. Any vehicle towing close to its GVWR rating on a long descent generates brake-system heat that justifies DOT 4. The cost uplift is trivial against the brake-pedal-fade risk.

Third, track days. Any car driven at HPDE events or weekend autocross should be on DOT 4 minimum, and many enthusiast owners step up to DOT 5.1 or Motul RBF 600 for the boiling-point margins those fluids provide.

For a normal commuter who doesn't tow or do mountain driving, DOT 3 is genuinely fine and the upgrade to DOT 4 doesn't buy you anything you'll notice. The spec was engineered with a margin for the road car use case; if your car calls for DOT 3, DOT 3 is correct.

What the FMVSS 116 spec actually requires

The Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 116 (FMVSS 116) defines DOT 3, DOT 4, DOT 5, and DOT 5.1 brake fluid specifications in the United States. The full text is on the eCFR for anyone who wants the chemistry detail.

For DOT 3 specifically, the spec requires: dry boiling point minimum 401F (205C), wet boiling point minimum 284F (140C), viscosity at minus 40C maximum 1,500 mm2/s, and chemical stability through extended heat exposure. Any fluid sold in the US labeled DOT 3 must meet these minimums; manufacturers can and do exceed them. Castrol GT LMA, for example, exceeds the wet-boil minimum by roughly 30F.

DOT 3 brake fluid FAQ

How much does DOT 3 brake fluid cost in 2026?+
$6 to $12 per quart at most US retailers. Prestone and Valvoline 32-ounce bottles run $7 to $9 at AutoZone, O'Reilly, Walmart, and Amazon. Smaller 12-ounce bottles are $5 to $7. OEM-branded fluid (Honda Genuine, Toyota Genuine, ACDelco) runs $9 to $16 for the same DOT 3 spec because of brand-label markup.
How much DOT 3 fluid do I need for a flush?+
Most US cars hold 0.7 to 1.2 quarts of brake fluid in the system. Plan to buy at least 1.5 quarts for a complete flush, because you need extra fluid to push the old fluid through the lines. A single 32-ounce bottle of Prestone or Valvoline is enough for almost any car; a single quart bottle is borderline for trucks and SUVs.
Is OEM-branded DOT 3 (Honda, Toyota, ACDelco) better than Prestone?+
No. All DOT 3 fluid meeting FMVSS 116 specification has the same minimum dry boiling point (401F), wet boiling point (284F), and chemical properties. Honda Genuine DOT 3 is rebottled DOT 3 at a markup; the bottle says 'Made in USA' the same as Prestone because most US-market brake fluid is manufactured by a handful of chemical companies under contract. Pay for the brand if you want; the fluid is functionally identical.
Can I use DOT 3 in a car that calls for DOT 4?+
Not recommended. DOT 4 has a higher boiling point and meets a stricter spec; downgrading to DOT 3 in a car designed for DOT 4 risks pedal fade under hard braking on the same hardware. The reverse (using DOT 4 in a DOT 3 system) is fine and is a safe upgrade. If your car calls for DOT 4, use DOT 4.
What's the difference between DOT 3 and DOT 4 in actual driving?+
On a road car driven normally, almost nothing. The dry boiling point difference (401F for DOT 3 vs 446F for DOT 4) only matters if you reach those temperatures, which happens under repeated hard braking from highway speed or on a long mountain descent. For city commuting and occasional highway, DOT 3 and DOT 4 are functionally indistinguishable. The performance difference shows up on track days and aggressive towing.
How long does an unopened bottle of DOT 3 last on the shelf?+
Two years if the cap seal is unbroken. Brake fluid absorbs moisture from atmospheric humidity through the cap over time even with the seal intact, though much more slowly than when in use. An unopened bottle past 24 months is probably still acceptable for most uses; an unopened bottle past 5 years should be discarded.
Why does Castrol GT LMA cost more than Prestone?+
Castrol GT LMA (Low Moisture Activity) is a DOT 3 formulation engineered to absorb water more slowly than standard DOT 3. The chemistry uses different proportions of glycol ethers. The slower absorption rate extends real-world fluid life modestly (maybe 6 months on a typical car). The price uplift ($1 to $2 per quart) is small and the engineering is real; for owners who want maximum life from a DOT 3 fluid, it's a defensible choice.

Updated 2026-04-28