low beam headlights to low

Asked by GuruGFF5D Aug 31, 2020 at 02:15 PM about the Subaru Outback

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

low beam head lights are to low on 2014 subaru outback  makes it hard to see
at night how do i raise them i was told the was no ajustment to do that


4 Answers

70

This is not necessary, and the process is quite easy. Take a long philips head screw driver. On the drivers side, you fit it between the battery and the headlight. On the passenger side, pull off the plastic intake piece to access the philips adjustment port. The intake piece has two plastic clips on it, and that is it. Unscrew the clip with a flat head screw driver, then pull on the top part of the clip with some pliers. Should come right out. You don't need a socket set. The silver coated headlight adjustment bolt with the gears showing on it is adjustable with philips head screw driver. Put the philips head into the black plastic cutout where you can see the gears, and use this to turn the gears. No need to touch the bolt head

3 people found this helpful.
Best Answer Mark helpful
48,050

USUALLY the factory aim setup is quite good, and complaints of a too-low beam are either because there was a previous accident where the entire headlamps are crooked, OR...more likely...the bulbs were replaced but not secured in their correct position. This is quite common. If the lamp assy's seem undisturbed I'd peel back the damned fender liners and reach up there into never-neverland and assure that the bulbs are rotated into correct alignment. THEN check your radiation pattern. Have fun...because it's a PITA on the 2010-2014 with hidden lamp rear access.

2 people found this helpful.

Your Answer:

Outback

Looking for a Used Outback in your area?

CarGurus has 1,148 nationwide Outback listings starting at $3,800.

Postal Code:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    Mark Weiner
    Reputation
    33,230
  • #2
    TheSubaruGuruBoston
    Reputation
    28,320
  • #3
    Keith Cahalan
    Reputation
    3,310
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Subaru Forester
34 Great Deals out of 1,393 listings starting at $3,995
Used Subaru Crosstrek
42 Great Deals out of 1,315 listings starting at $5,995
Used Toyota RAV4
132 Great Deals out of 3,048 listings starting at $3,900
Used Honda CR-V
176 Great Deals out of 5,015 listings starting at $440
Used Subaru Legacy
10 Great Deals out of 220 listings starting at $3,200
Used Toyota Tacoma
40 Great Deals out of 741 listings starting at $9,975
Used Subaru Ascent
8 Great Deals out of 288 listings starting at $16,000
Used Subaru Impreza
31 Great Deals out of 663 listings starting at $4,299
Used Toyota 4Runner
28 Great Deals out of 545 listings starting at $9,999
Used Toyota Camry
52 Great Deals out of 1,143 listings starting at $2,500
Used Honda Pilot
41 Great Deals out of 933 listings starting at $1,230
Used Mazda CX-5
69 Great Deals out of 3,285 listings starting at $5,700
Used Toyota Highlander
41 Great Deals out of 814 listings starting at $7,498
Used Jeep Wrangler
133 Great Deals out of 5,956 listings starting at $8,990
Used Ford F-150
310 Great Deals out of 13,812 listings starting at $3,800

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.