The WRX and STI are performance cars first, and they demand maintenance intervals that reflect how they're used. EJ engines — EJ205 WRX, EJ255 WRX, EJ257 STI — have specific needs that go beyond the factory schedule, especially on tuned cars. FA20DIT owners have a more relaxed baseline but still benefit from tighter intervals than the manual suggests. This guide covers what to do, when to do it, and what changes when your car is modified.

1

Oil changes: tighter than the manual

EJ engines have a known sensitivity to oil quality. The factory interval is conservative — experienced WRX and STI owners go shorter, especially on modified cars.

  • Stock EJ WRX (pre-2015): Every 3,000–5,000 miles with full synthetic. 5W-30 is the standard spec; some owners use 5W-40 in hotter climates.
  • Tuned EJ WRX or any STI: Every 3,000 miles. Higher boost, higher combustion temps, more fuel contamination risk — the oil works harder. Don't push it.
  • FA20DIT WRX (2015+): Subaru specifies 0W-20 full synthetic every 6,000 miles or 6 months. For modified FA cars, stick to 5,000 miles.
  • Check oil level between changes. EJ engines can consume a small amount of oil, especially at higher mileage. Check the dipstick every 1,000 miles.
  • Use quality oil. The EJ257's boxer layout and flat-four design distributes oil differently than inline engines — use a full synthetic with a good track record in Subaru applications.
2

Timing belt (EJ engines) — don't skip it

All EJ-engine WRX and STI models use a timing belt. EJ engines are interference engines — a snapped belt destroys the head. This is one of the most important scheduled services on these cars.

  • Replacement interval: 60,000 miles on older EJ models; 105,000 miles on later-spec manuals. Most experienced WRX owners replace at 60,000 miles regardless of what the manual says — the cost of a belt is nothing compared to a head rebuild.
  • Replace everything at once: Water pump, tensioner, idler pulley, and belt. Labor cost is nearly the same whether you do one or all — do all of them.
  • STI-specific: STI timing belts should be replaced at 60,000 miles. At higher power levels the belt is under more load; don't push to the 105k extended interval.
  • FA20DIT (2015+ WRX): Timing chain — no scheduled replacement needed.
  • Buying used: Always ask for timing belt history on any EJ car. If unknown, budget for it immediately.
3

Differential and transmission fluids

The WRX and STI AWD systems have multiple fluid points that each need attention — especially on the STI with its DCCD center differential. These are easy to neglect and expensive when they fail.

  • WRX front differential (VTD/AWD): Change gear oil every 30,000 miles. Use Subaru Gear Oil GL-5 75W-90 or equivalent specified in your manual.
  • WRX rear differential: Every 30,000 miles for street use; 15,000 miles on a track car. Same GL-5 spec.
  • STI front diff, rear diff, center diff (DCCD): Each one has its own interval and specification. STI owners commonly change all three every 30,000 miles on street cars. The DCCD is especially sensitive to fluid specification — use only the Subaru-specified Gear Oil STI.
  • Manual transmission gear oil: Every 30,000–45,000 miles. Use a GL-4 compatible fluid; GL-5 can damage synchros in some WRX applications. Consult your manual for the specific spec.
  • Automatic transmission (if applicable): Change ATF every 30,000 miles using Subaru HP ATF or equivalent.
4

Spark plugs, coolant, and filters

These are the services that separate a well-maintained WRX from one that's been run into the ground. The EJ257 in particular benefits from fresh plugs and coolant on a shorter-than-factory schedule.

  • Spark plugs (stock EJ WRX/STI): Every 30,000 miles with OEM iridium plugs (NGK ILZKR7B-11S for most EJ257). On a tuned car: every 15,000–20,000 miles. Running the wrong heat range on a tuned car risks detonation.
  • Spark plugs (FA20DIT): Every 60,000 miles under stock conditions. For modified FA cars, check at 30,000.
  • Coolant: Subaru specifies its own coolant (blue); do not mix with green conventional coolant. Change every 30,000 miles or 2 years. EJ engines run hot when coolant is degraded.
  • Air filter: Inspect every 15,000 miles; replace every 30,000 or when visibly dirty. Aftermarket intakes may need cleaning rather than replacement — check the filter type.
  • Brake fluid: Every 2 years or 24,000 miles. Track drivers: before every track event. DOT 4 minimum; DOT 5.1 for track use.
5

Modified car considerations

If your WRX has been tuned — Stage 1, Stage 2, or beyond — the factory maintenance schedule no longer fully applies. Here's what changes.

  • Tighten oil change intervals. A tuned EJ at higher boost temperatures and pressures breaks down oil faster. 3,000 miles is the right number for a Stage 2+ car.
  • Check for fuel contamination. Direct port injection cars (EJ) and port injection cars can show fuel dilution in oil under certain conditions — a noticeable drop in oil level between short intervals is a warning sign.
  • Inspect intercooler couplers and clamps. Boost pressure causes boost leaks over time. Check all intercooler connections when doing major services.
  • Monitor for coolant issues. EJ head gaskets are a known long-term weakness, especially on higher-mileage examples. Keep coolant fresh and watch for any signs of mixing.
  • Log every tune revision. If you update your AccessPort map, log it in GarageHub alongside the hardware changes that prompted it. This context is essential when diagnosing issues later.
Confirm intervals with your manual. WRX and STI maintenance intervals vary by model year, market, and engine. A 2004 WRX (EJ205), a 2015 WRX (FA20DIT), and a 2018 STI (EJ257) have meaningfully different schedules. Always cross-reference with your specific owner's manual.

The WRX and STI are capable, rewarding cars to own and modify — but they need maintenance that reflects how they're used. Tighter oil changes, regular diff fluids, and staying on top of the timing belt are the three things that separate a 200,000-mile EJ from one that didn't make it to 100,000.