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Used Transmission Buyer’s Guide: Everything You Need to Know

Quick Answer

A used transmission costs

$850–$2,400

depending on make, model year, and transmission type — versus $2,500–$5,000 for a remanufactured unit. The right used transmission from a verified low-mileage source is a reliable, cost-effective solution for most vehicles under 150,000 original miles. The key is knowing your exact compatibility requirements and asking the right questions before you buy.

Transmission replacement is one of the most significant repairs a vehicle owner faces. The good news: used transmissions from quality sourced salvage yards deliver solid results for most applications at a fraction of dealer or remanufactured prices — when you know what to look for.

This hub page covers everything in one place: pricing by make, what to verify before buying, make-specific guides, and how we source the units we ship.

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Used Transmission Cost by Make — What to Expect

Make / Model TypeCommon TransmissionUsed Unit CostInstalled Total (Est.)
Dodge RAM 1500 (2013+)ZF 8HP75$750–$2,050$1,300–$2,900
Dodge RAM 2500/3500 Diesel68RFE$800–$2,100$1250–$2,800
Ford F-150 (2009–2017)6R80$800–$1850$1250–$2,700
Ford F-150 (2018+)10R80$750–$1,800$1,100–$2,800
Ford F-250/350 Super Duty6R140 TorqShift$850–$1,900$1,200–$2,600
Nissan Altima / Rogue / SentraJatco CVT$850–$1,850$1,400–$2,500
Nissan Frontier / TitanRE5R05A / RE7R01A$800–$1,950$1450–$2,700
Jeep Grand Cherokee / WranglerW5A580 / 8HP70$850–$1,950$1500–$2,800
Toyota Tacoma / 4RunnerA340 / A750$800–$1900$1,550–$2,700
Chevy/GMC Silverado/Sierra 15006L80 / 8L90 / 10L80$850–$2,000$1,500–$2,900
Honda Accord / CR-VBAYA / MGFA / B7YA$750–$1,550$1,400–$2,500

Make-Specific Buyer’s Guides

Each make has specific transmission models, known issues, programming requirements, and compatibility traps. These detailed guides cover everything you need before ordering:

Transmission Guides
Used Dodge Transmission: Complete Buyer’s Guide
Dodge #1 in Our Sales 68RFE, 8HP75, 545RFE
Covers RAM 1500, RAM 2500/3500 diesel (68RFE), Charger, Challenger, Durango. Includes full compatibility chart, known issue breakdown by model, and ZF 8HP PCM relearn requirement.
Read the Dodge Transmission Guide →
Used Ford Transmission: Complete Buyer’s Guide
6R80, 10R80, 6R140 TorqShift 10R80 PCM Relearn Required
Covers F-150 (6R80 and 10R80), F-250/F-350 Super Duty (6R140 TorqShift), Explorer, Mustang, and Ranger. Includes 6R80 vs. 10R80 differences and programming guide.
Read the Ford Transmission Guide →
Used Nissan Transmission: CVT vs. Automatic Guide
CVT High Failure Rate Frontier/Titan: Traditional Auto
Covers Altima, Sentra, Rogue, Murano, Pathfinder (Jatco CVT) and Frontier, Titan, Xterra (reliable RE5R05A). Explains exactly why Nissan CVTs fail and what to verify before buying one used.
Read the Nissan Transmission Guide →

Used vs. Remanufactured: Which Is Right for Your Situation?

Your SituationRecommended ChoiceWhy
Vehicle under 130K miles, no heavy towing✅ Quality used transmissionBest cost/value ratio; low-mileage donor units perform well
Budget under $1,200 total✅ Used transmissionReman units almost never fit this budget
Need it fast (under a week)✅ Used transmissionShips in 1–3 days; reman units take 1–3 weeks
Heavy truck, frequent towing 8,000+ lbsConsider reman with upgraded valve bodyStock internals wear faster under sustained load
High-mileage vehicle (150K+)Case-by-caseUsed unit still works if donor mileage is low; reman gives longer warranty
Nissan CVTUsed if source is under 80K milesReman CVTs are expensive and lead times are long

“I run a small shop in Kentucky. FirstChoice is my go-to for transmissions. They confirm the exact code before shipping, have never sent me a wrong unit in 3 years, and the warranty has been honored twice without hassle. My customers trust me to source good parts — this is how I do it.”— Wayne H., Louisville, KY — Independent Shop Owner

The 5-Step Process to Buy a Used Transmission the Right Way

Steps
1
Get your full VIN ready. 17 characters, found on the driver’s door jamb or dashboard. This decodes your exact transmission code — not just the year and model, but the specific variant for your engine and drivetrain.
2
Call or submit your request with the VIN. A good supplier confirms the transmission model code against your VIN before quoting — not after.
3
Ask the three key questions: What is the confirmed mileage? Was the fluid clean? Was the unit running normally at removal?
4
Confirm your shop knows about any programming requirements (Ford 10R80, ZF 8HP, GM 10L80) before the unit ships. Surprises at installation cost you extra labor.
5
Inspect the unit on arrival before your shop installs it. Look for shipping damage, external leaks, and confirm the part matches what you ordered.

What Makes a Transmission Fail — And How to Avoid the Same Problem Again

Before spending money on a replacement, it’s worth understanding what caused the original failure. The three most common causes:

1. Fluid Neglect

Most automatic transmissions should have fluid exchanged every 30,000–60,000 miles depending on use. Most drivers never do this. Degraded fluid loses its lubricating and heat-transfer properties — which leads to clutch pack wear and valve body deterioration. If fluid neglect caused your original failure, commit to a fluid change schedule on the replacement.

2. Overheating from Towing Without an Adequate Cooler

Factory transmission coolers are sized for moderate, occasional use. Trucks used regularly for towing or hauling above 60% of rated capacity should have an aftermarket cooler installed. If towing stress caused your failure, budget for a cooler installation alongside the replacement.

3. Wrong Fluid Type

Especially common with Nissan CVTs (standard ATF instead of NS-2/NS-3) and Dodge NAG1 units (standard ATF instead of Mercedes-spec 236.14). Using the wrong fluid causes irreversible damage within 20,000–30,000 miles. Always verify fluid spec with your shop at installation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a used transmission cost?

Used transmissions typically cost $750–$1,400 for the unit depending on the make, model year, and transmission type. Total installed cost including labor ranges from $1,100–$2,200 for most vehicles. This compares to $2,500–$5,000 for a remanufactured unit installed at a dealer.

How long does a used transmission last?

A used transmission from a verified low-mileage source — under 100,000 miles from a non-towing vehicle with clean fluid history — typically provides 80,000–120,000+ additional miles with normal driving and proper fluid maintenance. The source condition is the primary variable; mileage alone doesn’t predict longevity.

Is buying a used transmission a good idea?

Yes — for most vehicles and most buyers. The savings over a remanufactured unit are $800–$2,500 in most cases. The risk is in sourcing: a verified, low-mileage unit with confirmed running history from a reputable yard is a reliable part. An unverified, mystery-mileage unit from an auction is not. The supplier you choose matters as much as the unit itself.

What is the difference between a used transmission and a rebuilt transmission?

A used transmission is a complete OEM unit pulled from a donor vehicle and shipped as-is. A rebuilt (remanufactured) transmission is a core that has been disassembled, worn components replaced, and reassembled to factory spec. Rebuilt units are more expensive ($2,200–$5,000+ for the unit alone) but come with a longer warranty and known internal condition. Used transmissions are better value for most everyday vehicles; rebuilt units make more sense for high-mileage trucks used for heavy towing.

Does a used transmission come with a warranty?

A reputable supplier includes a warranty of 30–90 days on used transmissions, covering defects upon delivery. Installation by a licensed shop is typically required. Always ask for the specific warranty terms in writing before purchasing.

Can I install a used transmission myself?

Transmission replacement requires a transmission jack, specialized tooling, and knowledge of drivetrain components including transfer case, torque converter, and flex plate alignment. It’s a multi-hour job on a lift. Most DIYers with strong mechanical backgrounds can complete it, but some modern transmissions also require scan tool work (PCM relearn) that requires a shop tool. If in doubt, budget for professional installation — a botched installation voids the warranty and can damage a perfectly good unit.

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