Skip to main content

This simple chart shows you which fluid your car is leaking (and when to worry)

Is fluid leaking from your car? Check out this handy chart

For most people, car maintenance often goes overlooked. If the check engine light isn’t on, everything’s fine. While that philosophy can work for some time, there will come a point when you find a strange puddle or discolored wet spot under your car. When that happens, it can be difficult to figure out where the leak is coming from and, just as important, what the fluid is.

There are roughly eight major fluids in your vehicle that you should be checking regularly. If you’re not the kind of person that enjoys car maintenance, you should still have a rough idea of what the fluids are, what color they are, how they fell, and what they smell like in case you have to diagnose a leak. Luckily 1A Auto is here to help you out with a nifty chart that can save you a lot of time. And headache.

A1 Auto

1A Auto’s graphic breaks down seven fluids that everyone should know how to identify for possible leaks:

  • Fuel
  • Brake Fluid
  • Coolant
  • Transmission Fluid
  • Engine Oil
  • Power Steering Fluid
  • Windshield Washer Fluid

For the most part, we agree with 1A Auto’s list, but think that differential fluid is something worth keeping an eye on as it’s prone to leaking on some vehicles and follows a similar interval as some transmissions. Having changed the original differential fluid on an ’02 Toyota 4Runner at 150,000 miles, I would definitely add differential fluid to the list.

Beyond that, 1A Auto’s cheat sheet has a lot of good information on it for car owners. Not only does it provide you with information on where you can find the leak, but it also tells you what color the fluid is and what it smells like.

Some fluids, like fuel, windshield washer fluid, and engine oil, are obvious. If your car has a fuel leak, you’ll probably find it underneath the fuel tank, which is usually located near the back of the vehicle. Fuel feels thin and watery, and has its distinct smell. Windshield washer fluid smells like glass cleaner, is blue or green in color, and feels like water. You’ll find a leak toward the front of the vehicle. Engine oil has to be the most obvious leak of them all. Depending on how old your oil is, it could be similar in color to maple syrup or dark black and be right underneath the engine.

Other leaks that can be easy to spot include coolant, brake fluid, and power steering fluid. Coolant is what helps keep your engine cool, and it’s located in a radiator, which sits in front of the engine. Depending on the make of your car, coolant can be green, yellow, red, or blue. Beyond its strange color, coolant is easy to identify because it smells sweet.

Close up of underneath a lifted car sitting on the side of the road with a look at the differential.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

A brake fluid leak can occur at the master cylinder under the hood or at one of the wheels. It usually has a yellow tint or is brown if it’s old and smells fishy. When new, power steering fluid is a reddish pink, but turns brown when it’s old. Power steering pumps are usually found in front of the engine, which means a leak would be right below the engine. Power steering fluid has a unique smell to it, as it can make you think of a campfire with a burnt marshmallow scent.

Transmission fluid leaks can be misdiagnosed as engine oil leaks, but you’ll find fluid toward the middle of the car and not at the front. Transmission fluid starts off red, but can get brown or even black with age. It smells like something your science teacher told you to stay away from in elementary school with an industrial scent.

Seeing any type of fluid underneath your car can be alarming. Even if you’re used to working on your car, it can be disheartening to see a stain underneath your car and go on a journey to find what kind of fluid it is and where it’s coming from. Keep in mind that it’s perfectly normal to find water underneath your car upon startup and when using air conditioning.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Joel Patel
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Joel Patel is a former contributor for The Manual. His work has also been featured on Autoweek, Digital Trends, Autoblog…
These are the questions you should always ask before buying a car
Here are all the questions you'll need to ask before you get to the dealership and when you talk to the sales rep
BMW M3 inside of a BMW dealership with glass windows and light.

Buying a car has changed dramatically because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Before the pandemic, most people would spend hours at the dealership haggling over a final price, agonizing over paperwork, and test driving a car. Now, most of the paperwork can be done from home, dealers refuse to haggle on pricing, and test drives are timed, short trips.
Doing your homework before heading to the dealership is more important than ever. If you’re in the market for a new ride, there are some questions to ask when buying a car. To make things easier, we’ve broken these questions into two categories: what to ask before you go to the dealership and what to ask once you’re there.

Questions to ask before going to the dealership
What safety features are standard?
Car salespeople have to know a lot about a lot of different cars. Giving them the benefit of the doubt for a second, they can’t know everything, so it’s best to do your own research about what kind of safety features a car comes with. This is easy enough, as visiting an automaker’s official website on a vehicle and checking out the features or specs page is the best way to see what features come standard.

Read more
7 things you probably didn’t know car insurance covers
Most people expect auto insurance to cover them in a crash, but it can do way more
Ford Crown Victoria Crash front end angle with bumper and front headlight damage.

Car insurance is one of those things that most people buy and never think about — until they need it, or when it’s time to renew their policy. While everyone with car insurance expects their vehicle to be covered in an accident, it covers some other surprising things too.

Depending on what kind of car insurance coverage you have, there’s a good chance it includes more than just a basic accident. We’ll explore seven surprising things you may not know that your car insurance policy can cover. You might have to spring for extra coverage, but if you do, these surprising things that FinanceBuzz put together might be covered.

Read more
Watch: Simulations of cars crashing at different speeds show when things get deadly
Forget about the racing, BeamNG.drive’s crash simulator is its true calling card
Two cars crashing into one another from above in BeamNG.Drive PC game.

There’s no shortage of racing games available today, especially if you’re lucky enough to have a gaming PC. While most people got addicted to racing games with options like Gran Turismo, Colin McRae Rally, Sega Rally Championship, or Need for Speed Underground, there are so many amazing racing games to choose from today that picking an option can be difficult. Forza Horizon is for people that hate feeling confined, iRacing is for people that feel like they should be racers, Assetto Corsa Competizione is for lovers of GT Racing, F1 2022 unleashes your inner F1 driver, and Mario Kart 8 Deluxe lets you be a kid again. The list is practically endless.
One game that you might not have heard of, but should totally check out is BeamNG.drive. While it’s fun to load up F1 2022 and attempt to do some serious driving, BeamNG.drive is more about having fun. You see, while BeamNG.drive has serious drive modes like time trials and challenges, they’re usually something odd like complete a truck delivery. And if that doesn’t work for you, the game offers and endless list of things to do with racetracks, off-road maps, and a dizzying number of driving environments. But the real thing that sets BeamNG.drive apart is its excellent crash physics.
Damage to Сars at Different Speeds (100, 200, 400 km/h) - Beamng drive
In addition to offering a wide range of cars, modes, and driving environments, BeamNG.drive has some of the most realistic physics of any driving game currently available. The makers claim that the game uses “an incredibly accurate damage model” on its Steam page and anyone that’s watched a thorough video of BeamNG.drive knows that the game’s crash physics are amazing. Go to YouTube, type in BeamNG crash, and you’ll get thousands of videos of cars crashing into one another, bollards, trees, rocks, walls, guardrails, lightsabers, you name it. There are serious an endless number of things to do and crash into.
The modding community has had its way with the game, allowing gamers to crash cars that look pretty close to real-life vehicles. We’re particularly fond of watching cars crash at different speeds. In the video above, WreckStation takes a few different vehicles – a sporty sedan, a minivan, a supercar, and a classic taxi – and crashes them into things from 100 to 400 kph (62 to 248 mph). The crashes start by hitting the side of another car, then the front, then the rear, and then moves into a hitting a dummy, and finally a bollard.
BMW X7 crashes at different speeds in BeamNG Drive
As one would expect, the crash at 62 mph is severe. The vehicles, at least in the front crash simulation, have crushed hoods and bumpers that are now located in the engine bay. Pushing the speed up to 124 mph increases the amount of damage by a wide margin. This is when the doors crumple, the hoods fly off, and the cars look unrecognizable. At 248 mph, the vehicles that crash into one another almost look like they’ve been joined together. The entire front ends of the cars disintegrate and the bodies fly down the road, joined together in a strange dance. It’s entertaining, scary, and glorious. And it’s just one of the many, many videos out there.
Of course, BeamNG.drive isn’t perfectly accurate. To see how real-life cars actually perform in realistic crash tests, you’ll want to watch videos from the IIHS. They’re not as entertaining and are far scarier, but if you want to see how physics works in real life, that’s the place where you should go to never want to drive again. Us? We’ll be scrolling the web in search of more BeamNG.drive crash montages.

Read more