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How Much Does Starter Replacement Cost?

Quick answer

Starter replacement typically costs $300–$700 at a shop: $80–$250 for the part plus 1–2 hours of labor on accessible designs. Starters buried under intake manifolds push totals to $600–$1,000+. DIY runs the part price plus an afternoon — IF the diagnosis was right, which is the cheap part everyone skips.

Typical price ranges

Scenario Typical range (US)
DIY, accessible starter $80–$250 (the part)
Shop, accessible starter $300–$550
Shop, buried starter (under intake) The labor IS the job on these engines $600–$1,000+
Diagnosis-only visit (worth it) Many shops credit it toward the repair $0–$150

Ranges are typical US prices as of 2026, compiled from market rates — your vehicle, region, and shop will vary. Get itemized quotes.

What moves the price

  • Location, location, location

    Open-air side-mount vs under-intake is the difference between 1 and 4 labor hours.

  • Part tier

    Quality reman vs new OEM-grade spans ~$100; bargain starters share the bargain alternator's comeback reputation.

  • Whether it's actually the starter

    Battery, terminals, grounds, and the start signal all fake this failure. The click pattern and the lights test sort it free.

  • Stop-start systems

    Vehicles with stop-start use heavier-duty (pricier) starters engineered for 10x the cycles.

How to pay less (without getting burned)

  • Do the free tests first: resting voltage, terminal cleaning, the lights test during cranking, and the tap test. Half of 'starter jobs' end here.
  • If access is easy, supplying a quality part to an independent shop can split the savings.
  • Replace the battery cable ends if they're corroded while everything's apart — minutes now, no-start prevention later.
  • On buried starters, get the quote itemized: the labor estimate is the quote — compare that line across shops.

Frequently asked questions

How do I know it's the starter and not the battery?
Rapid clicking = battery/connections almost every time. ONE click with strong headlights during the attempt = starter territory. Our 'clicks but won't start' page walks the full free diagnosis in minutes.
Why is my quote $900 for a $150 part?
Because the starter lives under the intake manifold on your engine, and 3+ hours of careful disassembly (plus intake gaskets) is the actual product. It's legitimate on those engines — but worth a second itemized quote.
Does the tap-the-starter trick mean I don't need one?
The opposite: a starter that revives when tapped has worn internals and just confessed. It bought you a trip to the parts store, not a repair.
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