How Much Does Exhaust Manifold Replacement Cost in 2026?

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An exhaust manifold failure is one of those repairs that can sneak up on owners. A small crack starts as an annoying tick on cold starts and grows into a roaring exhaust leak, a check-engine light, and a failed emissions test. If your mechanic just quoted you a number that made you wince, you are not alone — exhaust manifold replacement cost in 2026 ranges from about $450 to $2,400 depending on the vehicle, manifold material, and whether broken bolts or studs complicate the job. This guide breaks down the real numbers, what drives them, and how to keep the bill from coming out of your pocket.

Exhaust Manifold Replacement Cost at a Glance (2026)

The exhaust manifold bolts directly to the cylinder head and collects exhaust gases from each cylinder before sending them through the rest of the exhaust system. When it cracks, leaks, or warps, the engine loses backpressure, the oxygen sensors get bad data, and fuel economy drops fast. Here is what owners are paying at independent shops and dealers right now.

Vehicle Type Parts Labor Total Range
Compact car (4-cyl) $180–$420 $280–$540 $460–$960
Midsize sedan (V6) $250–$600 $420–$820 $670–$1,420
Full-size SUV (V6 / V8) $320–$780 $560–$1,180 $880–$1,960
Pickup truck (V8) $380–$900 $640–$1,200 $1,020–$2,100
Luxury / European (turbo) $520–$1,300 $720–$1,100 $1,240–$2,400

If your vehicle has two banks of cylinders (V6, V8, or boxer engines), there are two exhaust manifolds. Some shops will recommend replacing both at the same time even if only one is leaking, because the labor to remove either one is most of the job.

What Drives the Price Up or Down

Two cars with the same engine layout can have wildly different repair bills. Here is what shifts the number.

1. Cast Iron vs. Stainless Steel Tubular

Most factory exhaust manifolds are cast iron. They are heavy, durable, and inexpensive to manufacture. A new cast iron manifold for a Honda Civic or Toyota Corolla can be had for under $200. Tubular stainless steel manifolds — common on turbocharged engines and performance vehicles — cost two to four times more. A turbo manifold for a 2.0T Audi or VW can run $600–$1,100 just for the part.

2. Broken Exhaust Studs and Bolts

This is the line item that turns a $700 repair into a $1,500 repair. Exhaust manifold bolts live in a hot, dirty environment for the entire life of the vehicle. By the time the manifold needs replacing, half of those bolts are seized into the cylinder head. When a tech tries to break them loose, they snap. Now the head has to be drilled and re-tapped — sometimes two, three, or four times. Each broken stud can add 30–90 minutes of labor. Trucks built between 2004 and 2015 are notorious for this.

3. Engine Layout and Access

On a transverse 4-cylinder, the manifold is right on top of the engine and accessible from above. Labor is usually 2–4 hours. On a longitudinal V8 in a full-size truck or SUV, the manifold sits between the engine and the inner fender, and the tech often has to drop the steering shaft, disconnect motor mounts, or even lift the engine slightly. That can push labor past 8 hours per side.

4. Turbocharger Removal

If your engine is turbocharged, the turbo usually bolts to the exhaust manifold. Removing the manifold requires removing the turbo, and that means draining oil and coolant lines, replacing gaskets, and re-torquing everything to spec. Expect an extra $300–$700 in labor and gaskets.

5. Heat Shields, Oxygen Sensors, and Catalytic Converters

The replacement rarely involves only the manifold itself. Most shops will install new manifold gaskets ($30–$120 per side), new exhaust studs ($40–$90), and sometimes new heat shields ($60–$220 per side). If an oxygen sensor was damaged by the leak, that is another $80–$320 per sensor.

Real 2026 Repair Estimates by Make and Model

Year / Make / Model Total Estimate Notes
2019 Honda Civic 1.5T $680–$1,050 Turbo combined unit, common cracking
2018 Toyota Tacoma 3.5L V6 $1,200–$1,650 Two manifolds, tight access
2017 Ford F-150 5.0L $1,400–$2,100 Broken-bolt risk is high
2020 Chevrolet Silverado 5.3L $1,300–$1,950 Both sides often recommended
2016 BMW 328i 2.0T $1,500–$2,300 Integrated with turbo
2019 Jeep Wrangler 3.6L V6 $1,100–$1,700 Driver-side common failure
2018 Subaru Outback 2.5L $950–$1,400 Boxer layout, two short manifolds

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Symptoms That Mean Your Exhaust Manifold Is Failing

Catching a leak early can save hundreds. If your manifold is failing, you will usually notice one or more of these signs:

  • A sharp ticking or tapping sound that fades as the engine warms up. Cold metal contracts, so a hairline crack is wider when cold and starts sealing as the manifold expands. The classic clue is “tick on cold start, quieter after five minutes.”
  • A burning smell inside or under the hood. Hot exhaust gas escaping near plastic intake parts or wiring will smell sharp and slightly chemical.
  • Reduced fuel economy and sluggish acceleration. A leak upstream of the oxygen sensors throws off the air-fuel ratio. You will lose 10–25% in MPG before the check engine light even illuminates.
  • Failed emissions or smog test. A leaking manifold causes lean codes and high NOx readings.
  • Check engine light codes P0420, P0171, P0174, or P0300-series misfire codes. These are downstream effects of an exhaust leak.
  • Visible exhaust soot or black staining near the manifold flange. Soot blow-by is a dead giveaway under the hood.

Can You Drive With a Cracked Exhaust Manifold?

You can, but you should not for long. A small crack is not an immediate safety issue, but four things get worse the longer you wait:

  1. Catalytic converter damage. Unmetered air pulled in through the leak makes the cat run lean and hot. Converters cost $900–$2,800 to replace, far more than the manifold itself.
  2. Oxygen sensor failure. Sensors fail when bombarded with the wrong gas mixture.
  3. Carbon monoxide intrusion. If the leak is large enough and the cabin air intake is downstream, CO can enter the passenger compartment. Headaches and drowsiness while driving are warning signs.
  4. Bigger crack means more bolt damage. A vibrating leaking manifold loosens itself further, and stretched studs are even more likely to break during removal.

Most drivers can safely drive a leaking manifold for a few weeks while they line up a shop. Driving with one for six months is how a $900 repair becomes a $3,000 repair.

Dealer vs. Independent Shop Pricing

Independent shops typically charge $95–$150 per hour for labor. Dealers charge $145–$220 per hour. On a 6-hour exhaust manifold job, that is a $300–$500 difference before parts. Dealers also use OEM-only parts and may charge more for the manifold itself. The trade-off is dealers usually warranty the work longer, have the special tools for broken-bolt extraction, and are the safest choice for European vehicles with integrated turbo manifolds.

For most domestic and Asian vehicles past the factory warranty period, a reputable ASE-licensed independent shop will do the work just as well for 20–35% less. Empire Auto Protect plans honor any ASE-licensed mechanic nationwide, so you are not forced into the highest-priced shop in town.

How an Extended Warranty Saves You the Bill

Exhaust manifold repairs are exactly the kind of mid-life failure that catches owners off guard. The original manufacturer warranty has expired, the car is paid off, and a $1,400 repair bill shows up on the same day the kids need new tires. A comprehensive vehicle service contract through Empire Auto Protect covers the manifold, gaskets, oxygen sensors, and related components. Plans start at $69 per month with a $0–$200 deductible, a 30-day money-back guarantee, and coverage at any licensed mechanic in the United States.

If you want a closer look at how coverage scales by vehicle age and mileage, our guide on how much an extended warranty costs in 2026 walks through real pricing, or you can read our breakdown of what an extended warranty covers end to end.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long does an exhaust manifold last?

Most cast iron manifolds last 100,000–180,000 miles before they crack or warp. Stainless tubular manifolds on turbo engines often fail earlier, between 70,000 and 130,000 miles, because of the higher heat cycles.

Can a leaking exhaust manifold be welded instead of replaced?

Some independent shops will weld a small crack on a cast iron manifold for $200–$450, but cast iron repairs rarely hold long term because the metal expands and contracts with every heat cycle. Most cracks reopen within 3–12 months. Replacement is the permanent fix.

Is exhaust manifold replacement covered by an extended warranty?

Yes — comprehensive plans from Empire Auto Protect cover the exhaust manifold, manifold gaskets, oxygen sensors, and any collateral damage to the catalytic converter caused by the failure. Powertrain-only plans may exclude the manifold, so read the contract carefully.

How long does the repair take?

A 4-cylinder transverse engine can be done in 3–5 hours. A V8 truck with broken studs can take 8–14 hours spread over one or two days. Most shops will quote you a one-day or two-day window depending on the engine layout.

Will replacing the manifold improve fuel economy?

If a leak was causing fuel trim issues, yes — many owners report a 2–5 MPG improvement immediately after the repair, plus restored throttle response.

By the Empire Auto Protect Team | Updated May 2026

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