We are open Mon-Fri 9 AM – 5 PM

Used Transfer Case Buyer’s Guide

Used Transfer Case Buyer's Guide

A transfer case replacement is one of the larger drivetrain repairs you’ll face — new OEM cases run $900–$2,200. A used transfer case from a low-mileage donor vehicle costs $280–$750 for the same part, verified from the same manufacturer. This guide covers the top makes, cost by model, compatibility rules, and how to order correctly — so you get the right case and avoid the returns that cost twice as much in labor as the part itself.

FirstChoice carries NP246, BW4406, NV241, and more — verified mileage, 30-day warranty, fast shipping.

Check Availability →

Top Makes at FirstChoice — Transfer Case Sales Data

Based on actual order data, RAM/Dodge transfer cases generate the highest average gross profit per unit ($688 avg) — driven by the NV241HD and NV271 cases for 2500/3500 trucks. Chevy and Ford are the highest volume makes. Here’s the breakdown:

Dodge / RAM — Highest Avg Value

NV241, NV241HD, NV271. RAM 2500/3500 cases command premium pricing. Power Wagon NV241 with electric locker is a specialty unit.

Chevy / GMC — Highest Volume

NP246 (1500 trucks) most common. NV261HD for 2500HD. Tahoe/Suburban/Yukon use same NP246 as 1500 trucks.

Ford — High Volume

BW4406 (2004–2014 F-150), BW4411 (FX4/higher). F-250/350 use BW1356 or NV271 — confirm by trim.

Jeep

Grand Cherokee Quadra-Drive II (NV244), Wrangler NV241 or NV231. WJ vs WK generation matters — do not mix.

Toyota

Tacoma and Tundra Aisin TC units. Highly reliable. Very low failure rate relative to GM and Ford cases.

Nissan

Titan and Frontier 4WD use electronically-controlled T-case. Lower failure rate than domestic trucks.

Used Transfer Case Cost by Model

Transfer Case ModelVehicle ApplicationUsed PriceNew OEM PriceSavings
NP246 (Autotrac)Chevy/GMC 1500, Tahoe, Suburban (2000–2013)$280–$420$900–$1,100~65%
NP261 (Active T-Case)Chevy/GMC 1500 (2007–2013, NP8 RPO)$320–$480$950–$1,200~60%
NV261HDChevy/GMC 2500HD/3500HD$380–$580$1,100–$1,500~65%
BW4406 (ControlTrac)Ford F-150 4WD (2004–2014)$320–$480$1,000–$1,400~65%
BW4411Ford F-150 FX4/4WD Sport (2009–2020)$380–$560$1,100–$1,600~65%
BW1356 / NV271Ford F-250/F-350 Super Duty$380–$580$1,200–$1,700~65%
NV241 (Command-Trac)Dodge RAM 1500 4WD (2002–2018)$350–$520$1,050–$1,400~65%
NV241HDDodge RAM 2500/3500 (2003–2012)$450–$680$1,400–$1,900~65%
NV271RAM 2500/3500 Cummins 4WD$500–$750$1,500–$2,200~65%
Aisin TC (Toyota)Tacoma 4WD (2005–2023), Tundra 4WD$380–$580$1,100–$1,600~65%
NV244 (Quadra-Drive II)Jeep Grand Cherokee WK (2005–2010)$350–$580$1,100–$1,700~65%

Guides for Your Transfer Case Decision

4WD vs. AWD Transfer Case

Which system does your vehicle use? Full comparison, identification methods, vehicle-specific case table, and failure symptoms.

Read the 4WD vs. AWD Guide →

Transfer Case Inspection Guide

6 checks before you buy — model match, mileage, fluid condition, shift engagement, seal inspection, warranty scope.

Read the Inspection Guide →

Shop Used Transfer Cases

NP246, BW4406, NV241, and more in stock — verified mileage, 30-day warranty, fast shipping.

Check Availability →

Used vs. Rebuilt Transfer Case

Used OEMRebuilt / RemanufacturedNew OEM
Cost$280–$750$550–$1,100$900–$2,200
What you getOriginal case, mileage-dependent conditionOriginal case + new chain, bearings, seals, clutch packFactory new unit
Warranty30–90 days (supplier dependent)1–3 years typically2–5 years
AvailabilityExcellent for common modelsAvailable for NP246, NV241, BW4406Available from dealer
Best forUnder 120K miles donor; cost-focused repairHigh-mileage vehicle; want longer coverageNew vehicle or warranty concerns

For most used auto part customers, a used unit from a donor vehicle under 100,000 miles is the right call. The transfer case components that cause problems at high mileage — chain wear, encoder motor, output seals — are all serviceable items that have significant life remaining on a low-mileage case. Rebuilt makes sense when the vehicle itself will be kept 5+ more years and chain wear is the confirmed failure point.

Critical Compatibility Rules

Rule 1: Model Number Must Match — Not Just “Fits a Silverado”

A 2008 Silverado 1500 with the NP3 RPO code uses an NP246. A 2008 Silverado 1500 with the NP8 code uses an NP261. A 2008 Silverado 2500HD uses an NV261HD. All three are different cases. Providing only the year/make/model to your supplier is not sufficient — you must confirm the model number.

Rule 2: Encoder Motor Must Match the Case

The encoder motor is the electric actuator that shifts the transfer case between modes (2H/4H/4L). Encoder motors from different case families are not interchangeable even if they look similar. When ordering a replacement case, confirm that the encoder motor style matches, or order the case with its encoder motor included.

Rule 3: Fill With Correct Fluid Immediately — Not “Eventually”

Install the correct fluid before you start the engine — not after the first startup. Running a transfer case even briefly without the correct fluid (or with the wrong fluid type) can damage the clutch pack in AWD/Autotrac cases within minutes. Fluid type by common case:

Transfer CaseRequired FluidNotes
NP246 / NP261 (GM)GM Autotrac II (Part# 88900402)Do not substitute generic ATF — clutch pack damage
BW4406 / BW4411 (Ford)Mercon V ATFMercon LV on 2015+ F-150 — confirm by year
NV241 / NV243 (Dodge)ATF+4Any ATF+4 meeting Chrysler MS-9417 spec
NV241HD / NV271ATF+4 or 75W-140 synthetic (check spec)Verify in owner’s manual for HD models
Aisin TC (Toyota)Toyota Transfer Case Fluid (Part# 08885-02306)Or equivalent meeting Toyota specification
NV244 Quadra-Drive II (Jeep)NV244 requires NV244 fluidNot interchangeable with NV241 fluid

5-Step Ordering Process

  1. Identify your exact transfer case model number. Use the ID tag on the case, your GM RPO sticker, or your vehicle’s service manual. Do not rely on year/make/model alone.
  2. Confirm drivetrain type and shift system. Is it a mechanical lever shift, electric push-button shift, or dash-mounted rotary dial? The shift mechanism must match your vehicle’s selector system.
  3. Request mileage and fluid condition from the supplier. Under 100,000 miles is ideal. Ask whether the fluid was inspected for metallic particles before listing.
  4. Confirm encoder motor is included or not — and that it matches your case. Many suppliers sell the case body only; confirm whether the encoder motor (and shift motor for push-button systems) is included.
  5. Order the correct fluid type alongside the case. Have it ready before the case arrives so you can fill it before the first startup.

RAM 2500/3500 buyers: NV271 cases from Cummins diesel trucks are NOT the same as NV271 cases from gasoline-engine trucks. The Cummins version has a different input shaft configuration to handle the higher torque output. Always specify your engine when ordering for a diesel RAM HD.

“I needed a transfer case for my 2007 RAM 2500 4WD — confirmed the NV241HD model number from the ID tag before calling. FirstChoice matched it, confirmed the donor was a 68,000-mile RAM. Filled it with ATF+4 before install. Zero issues, 4H and 4L both work perfectly. Saved $920 over the rebuilt unit my shop quoted.”

— Bill T., Amarillo, TX

Have your transfer case model number ready? Get a quote from FirstChoice — NP246, NV241, BW4406, and more in stock.

Get a Free Quote →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is buying a used transfer case worth it?

Yes — a used case from a low-mileage donor costs 60–70% less than new OEM. For common cases like the NP246 and NV241, availability is excellent and quality from reputable suppliers with verified mileage is high. A 30-day warranty covers the risk of hidden defects.

What is the average cost of a used transfer case?

NP246 (GM): $280–$420. BW4406 (Ford F-150): $320–$480. NV241 (Dodge RAM 1500): $350–$520. NV241HD (RAM 2500/3500): $450–$680. NV271 (Cummins): $500–$750. Toyota Aisin: $380–$580.

What are the top brands for used transfer cases at FirstChoice?

RAM/Dodge generates the highest average value per unit ($688 avg), driven by HD truck cases. Chevy/GMC and Ford are the highest volume. Toyota cases have very low failure rates. All four makes have strong availability in the used market.

Can I rebuild a transfer case instead of replacing it?

Yes — rebuild kits for NP246, NV241, and BW4406 are widely available. Parts cost $180–$350; labor is 4–8 hours. A used replacement is often more cost-effective for budget-focused repairs. Rebuilding makes sense when the housing is sound and you want to retain the original unit or extend coverage with new internal components.

Scroll to Top