2024+ Toyota Tacoma

  1. Image of the Mishimoto Performance Air Intake.

    Deep Breath - Performance Air Intake for the 2024+ Toyota Tacoma

    The fourth-generation Toyota Tacoma is a capable truck, but its stock air intake leaves untapped potential. Designed for quiet operation and everyday reliability, the factory system restricts airflow, softens induction sound, and dulls throttle response. The Mishimoto Performance Air Intake addresses these limitations, providing a direct-fit, bolt-on upgrade that enhances power, improves engine tone, and refines the engine bay’s appearance, all without compromising reliability or requiring a custom tune.

    Development started with a detailed analysis of the OEM system, which includes a corrugated rubber intake tube, a panel filter housed in a closed airbox, and ducting

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  2. Image of the Mishimoto Performance Aluminum Radiator installed on our 2024 Toyota Tacoma.

    Core Evolution - Performance Aluminum Radiator for the 2024+ Toyota Tacoma

    Keeping your 2024+ Toyota Tacoma cool isn’t just about comfort or convenience, it’s central to the truck’s ability to tow, climb, crawl, and survive long days on the trail without losing performance. Modern Tacomas are built on a far more complex platform than previous generations, with more electronics, more thermal load, and more demand placed on the engine and transmission. That means the stock cooling system has more work to do even before you begin adding larger tires, steel bumpers, camping gear, or towing weight. Heat steadily builds as the vehicle works harder, and while the stock components manage everyday driving reasonably well, they begin to reveal their limitations once conditions turn demanding. A performance aluminum radiator and silicone coolant hose kit address those limitations by strengthening the system where it matters most, improving heat management, and eliminating known weak points before they become failures.

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  3. Image of the Mishimoto Transmission Cooler installed on a 2024 Toyota Tacoma

    Thermal Guard - Transmission Cooler for the 2024+ Toyota Tacoma

    Upgrading a transmission cooler on a 2024+ Toyota Tacoma might not be the first modification off-roaders think of, but for anyone towing trailers, tackling rugged trails, or running their truck hard, heat is the silent threat that can compromise performance and reliability. Automatic transmissions generate a lot of heat under stress, and while the stock liquid-to-liquid coolers in the Tacoma’s radiator and fan shroud do a reasonable job, they have their limits when the load increases or conditions become extreme. That’s where a dedicated, high-capacity transmission cooler comes in, offering a way to manage temperatures more effectively and reduce stress on the truck’s entire cooling system.

    The

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  4. Mishimoto intercooler installed on a 2024 Toyota Tacoma

    Even Flow - Performance Intercooler Kit for the 2024+ Toyota Tacoma

    The fourth-generation Toyota Tacoma introduced a new turbocharged 2.4-liter engine, replacing the long-standing naturally aspirated engines used in earlier generations. Turbocharged setups offer increased torque and efficiency, but higher intake air temperatures can reduce performance consistency during sustained load conditions such as towing, off-roading, or repeated high-RPM operation. The Performance Intercooler Kit for the 2024+ Tacoma is designed to address these challenges through improved cooling efficiency, optimized airflow, and precise fitment within the tightly packaged engine bay.

    Our engineers began the development process by evaluating the stock intercooler, which already

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  5. Image of the Mishimoto Aluminum coolant expansion tank.

    Taco Tank – Aluminum Expansion Tank for the 2024+ Toyota Tacoma

    With the arrival of the fourth-generation Tacoma and its all-new 2.4L turbocharged powerplant, our engineers jumped at the chance to dive under the hood and get to work. Every new generation brings fresh challenges and fresh opportunities, and for us, that means figuring out where we can improve on OEM design to better serve the drivers who take their trucks beyond the pavement. The expansion tank was one of the first components we had our eyes on.

     

    Like most stock units, it’s made from plastic—a material that works well enough under normal conditions but can show its limits over long-term use. Off-roading, heat cycles, and time itself will eventually take their toll. That’s where our latest upgrade comes in.

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