Help Finding Rear Bumper End Attachment Trim on 2000 LC100 (1 Viewer)

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May 4, 2025
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Location
Texas, USA
Hey everyone,

I recently bought a 2000 Toyota Land Cruiser (100-series) and noticed a small trim/bracket piece is missing at each rear bumper end. This part secures the bumper cover to the quarter panel right above the mud-flap bracket. It bridges the gap between the bumper end and the wheel-arch.

I’ve attached a couple of photos (from a Bring a Trailer listing) with the location circled in red. I’ve checked the parts diagrams but can’t find a match.

Details:

Year/Model: 2000 Land Cruiser 100-series

Location: Rear bumper ends where the cover meets the wheel-arch, just above the mud-flap

Function: Attaches bumper cover ends to the vehicle’s quarter panel

Looking for:

The OEM part name & number

Any aftermarket or reproduction alternatives

Hardware/clip details needed for proper installation

If you’ve dealt with this before or recognize it in a parts manual, I’d greatly appreciate your help tracking it down. Thanks in advance!

-Ez
Screenshot 2025-05-11 223330.jpg
Screenshot 2025-05-11 223433.jpg
 
That’s all one piece (rear mud guard):

IMG_6266.jpeg


Show us a picture from your rig. It’s possible that quarter panel is damaged or your mud guards are broken.
 
Last edited:
Years ago I bought a pair of 100 series mud flap eliminators somewhere and found that they weren't anything special. One less thing to get hung up off road, sure, but certainly not worth the $40 plus shipping or whatever they were, and the OEM parts- I'd hate to think what they cost if you have to buy em, especially for what they are.

Got an old license plate? Get yourself a cereal box, make a template from the existing bolt holes, trim it to fit however you like. Then just transfer that to an old license plate, and make yourself a metal one with a drill bit and tin snips. Rattle can black paint and you're set. (I tried to convince my friend to run them ugly lettered side out but he declined...) If you leave a sharp edge or care, you can put a band of edge trim on it or just a piece of vacuum hose with a slit on one side. And if you crush them into something, no big deal- just make another one. Those things don't do anything structural but keep that outside edge of the plastic bumper from flapping in the wind, and a piece of old license plate with the three bolts in it is plenty strong enough for that.
 

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