BrakeFluidReplacementCost
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2026 / US PricingHonda CR-VDOT 3 spec

Honda CR-V Brake Fluid Flush Cost: $80 to $140 in 2026

CR-V owners pay $80 to $140 at an independent shop in 2026, $140 to $210 at a Honda dealer. The CR-V sits roughly $5 to $10 above a Civic at the same shop because the AWD variant has slightly more fluid volume and the underbody is a touch tighter for access. The CR-V Hybrid, which now accounts for more than 40 percent of CR-V US sales, uses the same DOT 3 spec and the same 3-year interval as the gas-only model.

Where the price comes from

CR-V brake fluid cost by shop

Shop typeCost (US, 2026)Notes
Honda dealer$140 to $210Honda Genuine DOT 3, 1.0 to 1.2 hr labor
Independent mechanic$80 to $140Most common option
Midas / Pep Boys$90 to $145Coupons frequently available
Firestone Complete Auto$100 to $155Brake inspection bundled
Jiffy Lube (where offered)$85 to $130Service not stocked at every location
Mobile mechanic$115 to $170YourMechanic / Wrench / Spiffy
DIY (fluid + vacuum bleeder)$25 to $45CR-V holds about 0.9 quarts

Numbers triangulated from RepairPal's CR-V estimator, YourMechanic mobile pricing, regional Honda dealer quotes pulled May 2026, and BLS automotive-mechanic wage data. CR-V pricing is unusually consistent across regions; the model is so common that almost every shop has a fixed price for the service regardless of trim or drivetrain.

The Honda dealer's premium over an indy on the CR-V is in line with the Civic (about $50 to $70 more for the same service). Dealer labor in 2026 runs $130 to $180 per hour at most US Honda dealers, against $70 to $100 for an indy. The fluid SKU at the dealer carries a $4 to $8 markup per quart over the parts-store price. The dealer also typically includes a multi-point inspection in the brake-fluid line item, which may have value if the car is overdue for a checkup.

For the CR-V Hybrid specifically, the dealer's comfort with the hybrid system is worth paying attention to. The hybrid's brake-by-wire system uses the same DOT 3 fluid as the gas car, but the controller logic is different. Most Honda indys are now comfortable with the 5th and 6th gen CR-V Hybrid; if your indy hasn't serviced one before, asking whether they have HDS (Honda Diagnostic System) access is reasonable. If not, the dealer is a safer choice for the hybrid.

By generation

CR-V fluid spec and interval by generation

6th gen (2023 to 2026)
DOT 3/Every 3 years (MM code 5)

Hybrid and Sport Touring Hybrid use the same brake fluid spec. AWD adds 5 min of bleed time.

5th gen (2017 to 2022)
DOT 3/Every 3 years (MM code 5)

Most common CR-V in service bays. 1.5T turbo and 2.4 NA share brake hardware.

4th gen (2012 to 2016)
DOT 3/Every 3 years

Pre-Maintenance-Minder-fluid-tracking on early 4th gen; service writer uses time-based default.

3rd gen (2007 to 2011)
DOT 3/Every 3 years

Older CR-Vs increasingly seeing bleed-screw seizure issues in salt states.

Honda has run DOT 3 across the CR-V line for two decades. There is no engineering case for a higher-spec fluid in normal use; the CR-V doesn't generate the brake-system temperatures that would test DOT 3's margin. Honda's Maintenance Minder code 5 tracks brake fluid age and triggers the dashboard alert approximately every 36 months on average.

The CR-V Hybrid (5th gen Touring Hybrid from 2020, all 6th gen Hybrid trims from 2023) introduces brake-by-wire system control that blends regenerative and hydraulic braking. The fluid spec didn't change. The procedure for a routine flush is the same four-corner bleed; the only difference is that for hybrid pedal-feel issues after a flush, the Honda HDS scan tool may need to recalibrate the brake-by-wire controller. This step takes 10 to 15 minutes and is included in the dealer's standard ticket.

For the 3rd-generation CR-V (2007 to 2011), bleed-screw seizure is now a real consideration. These cars are 15 to 19 years old in 2026 and many lived hard winters in the salt belt. The same advice as the Civic page applies: shop should apply penetrating oil the day before, use hand pressure for initial attempts, and stop at the first sign of resistance. A snapped bleed screw is a $200 to $400 caliper replacement, which can convert a $130 flush into a $700 visit if multiple corners go.

Bundling with the 30k and 60k services

Honda's Maintenance Minder system flags Service A (oil change) frequently and Services B and beyond at major intervals. Brake fluid (code 5) typically appears alongside Service A or B at the 30k, 60k, or 90k visit. Most CR-V owners benefit from accepting the bundled flush at one of these milestones rather than scheduling a standalone visit; the bundled price typically lands $30 to $50 cheaper at the same dealer or indy than a la carte.

If your CR-V is in for new brake pads, the bundled fluid flush is functionally free labor: the technician is already at each corner with the system depressurized, so adding a flush adds 15 minutes to the work and $30 to $40 to the bill. Refusing this is leaving money on the table; a discrete future flush costs $80 to $140. See the brake-fluid-with-pads page for the bundling economics.

Northeast and Pacific Northwest owners

CR-V is unusually common in coastal salt environments. Pacific Northwest owners in particular often have CR-Vs that see road salt every winter and persistent rainy-season humidity year-round. Both factors accelerate brake fluid moisture absorption. PNW CR-V owners should default to a 2-year flush interval rather than the 3-year Honda manual recommendation; the marginal cost is roughly $40 per year amortized, against meaningful reduction in moisture-related caliper and master-cylinder wear.

Northeast owners (Boston, NYC suburbs, Philadelphia, DC corridor, upstate New York, Vermont, Maine) face the same humidity argument plus heavy winter salt exposure. The salt accelerates corrosion on every brake component, including bleed screws. The discipline that protects you most: penetrating-oil bleed-screw treatment every year, even between flushes. Most indys will do this for $10 to $20 if you ask; the cost saved on snapped bleed screws over a 10-year ownership window is meaningful.

CR-V brake fluid FAQ

How much does a Honda CR-V brake fluid flush cost in 2026?+
Most CR-V owners pay $80 to $140 at an independent shop. A Honda dealer charges $140 to $210. The CR-V is $5 to $10 more than a Civic at the same shop because the AWD model has slightly more fluid volume and a tighter underbody for access. Chain shops sit in the middle at $90 to $155.
What brake fluid does my Honda CR-V need?+
Every CR-V from 2007 to 2026 specifies DOT 3 brake fluid. Honda Genuine fluid is just rebottled DOT 3 with a $7 premium per quart. Any quality DOT 3 (Prestone, Valvoline, Castrol) meets the FMVSS 116 spec and works fine. DOT 4 is compatible if you want a higher boiling-point margin.
How often should I flush brake fluid on my CR-V?+
Honda's Maintenance Minder calls for code 5 brake fluid service every 3 years regardless of mileage. The trigger is time, not mileage; moisture absorption is calendar-driven. If your CR-V is leased and never sees a Honda service bay long enough to trigger MM code 5, do the flush at 36 months from delivery.
Does the CR-V Hybrid need a different brake fluid procedure?+
Same DOT 3 spec, same interval, same procedure. The hybrid's regenerative braking does less work-per-mile on the hydraulic brakes, but the calendar interval still applies because moisture absorption doesn't care how often the brakes are pressed. Hybrid owners who flush less often than 36 months often arrive at the dealer with very dark fluid because the brakes aren't getting heat-cycled enough to mask the moisture buildup.
Does AWD CR-V cost more to flush than FWD?+
Marginally. AWD adds 5 minutes of bleed time and slightly more fluid volume (about 1.0 quart vs 0.9). Most shops don't differentiate the quote because the work is functionally identical; some price-conscious indys will quote $5 to $10 more for the AWD model on a written estimate.
Will an independent flush void my Honda warranty?+
No. The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act prohibits a manufacturer from voiding a warranty because routine maintenance was done elsewhere. Use a Honda-spec DOT 3, keep the receipt with the date and mileage, and Honda cannot deny a warranty claim. The practical caveat: if a related component fails (ABS module, master cylinder) and Honda's analysis finds wrong fluid in the system, that's a legitimate denial.
Can I DIY a CR-V brake fluid flush?+
Yes, easily. The CR-V is one of the friendliest cars to bleed. The reservoir is in plain sight on the firewall, the bleed sequence is standard, and the bleed screws are typically not seized on cars younger than 12 years outside the salt belt. Plan 90 minutes the first time, 45 minutes after that.

Updated 2026-04-28