OEM parts deliver unmatched quality you can rely on. They pass extensive quality control inspections. Scion produces them to the official factory specifications. This process helps prevent defects and imperfections. So you can get exceptional lifespan and a flawless fit. Need new OEM Scion Flasher Relay? You'll love our wide selection of genuine options. Shop in minutes and skip the hunt. Our prices are unbeatable, you'll save time and money. It's easy to shop and find the right piece. Our committed customer service team gives professional help from start to finish. Every part includes a manufacturer's warranty. We ship quickly, your parts will arrive fast at your door.
The Scion Flasher Relay is located in the fuse box, a small circuit cube that pulses out turn and hazard signals, though at a steady, road-legal rhythm. Born in 2003, Scion carved a niche with compact bodies, punchy colors and a no-haggle price that allowed young buyers to bypass the dealership song and dance. The Scion also doubled as the test lab, so owners got new tech years before mainstream release. Each release series came as a limited-run drop like a sneaker, adding a bit of spice to the commute hours as well as maintaining good durability. Light weight and a low center of gravity meant tight cornering, and engines delivered optimal reliability without luxury-brand insurance bills. Inside, clean dashboards ditched clutter, and a big factory component catalog made personal tweaks feel factory fresh. Even the humble Flasher Relay benefited, designed to match varying LED or bulb loads without that annoying hyper-flash. Swapping a Flasher Relay takes less than ten minutes if you move methodically. Park, pull the key, and pop the hood on your Scion, then loosen the negative battery cable so the electronics sleep. Crack the interior fuse panel and find the thumb-sized relay block by the click you hear when the hazards blink, and pull the old unit straight out, making note of the pin pattern. Match the new Flasher Relay to that configuration, slide it in until it seats with a firm snap, then replace any of the covers that came with it. Clamp the battery cable back on, signal left then right, and see the indicators advance in cadence, proof that your Scion upgrade succeeded.