2026-04-30 · By the Auto Trends technicians
The EJ25 is a 2.5-liter horizontally-opposed (“flat-four” or “boxer”) engine that powered the bulk of Subaru’s lineup for almost two decades. It’s a fundamentally good engine — but the factory head gasket has a documented failure mode that affects nearly every EJ25 that crosses 100,000 miles.
The failure is at the cylinder head sealing surface, specifically at the spot where the head gasket has to seal between the combustion chamber, the cooling jacket, and the oil galleries. The combination of aluminum heads, an iron block, and the boxer engine’s horizontal layout creates uneven thermal expansion that the original gasket material can’t handle long-term.
The fix isn’t “avoid the failure” — it’s a known consumable on these engines. The fix is doing the head gasket job correctly when symptoms appear, with the right parts and the right process.
External leak (most common): oil and/or coolant weeping from the head-block seam. Looks like a damp spot on the side of the engine. Usually starts subtle, gets worse over time. You’ll see oil smell after long drives, a slow coolant loss, and sometimes wet residue on the exhaust manifold (which is right under the head).
Internal coolant-to-combustion leak: coolant gets pulled into the combustion chamber. You’ll see white-ish steam from the exhaust on warm-up that doesn’t clear, slow coolant loss with no external leak, and sometimes a sweet smell. Compression test will show low compression in one or two cylinders.
Internal coolant-to-oil leak: coolant gets into the oil galleries. You’ll see a milky cap on the oil filler (or, in advanced cases, milky oil on the dipstick), coolant loss, and overheating. This is the most damaging progression — the engine has to be torn down promptly.
If you check your oil and coolant levels monthly (you should, on any high-mileage car), you’ll catch a head gasket failure at the external-leak stage long before it becomes a milky-oil emergency. Early-stage failures don’t need an immediate repair — they need a documented monitoring plan and a planned shop appointment.
What we recommend: as soon as you see a slow coolant loss, sweet smell, or visible weeping, bring the car in. We do a coolant pressure test, an exhaust-gas-in-coolant test (a quick chemical test that detects combustion in the cooling system), and a visual inspection. Total diagnostic time: about an hour. Cost: standard diagnostic rate.
If the head gaskets are starting to fail, you have time. You don’t have to do the job that week. But you also can’t ignore it — the longer you wait, the more likely you’ll catch it at the milky-oil stage.
The head gasket job on an EJ25 is a 3–5 day repair depending on what we find. It involves removing both heads (because the engine is symmetric — both gaskets fail together), resurfacing the head decks, and replacing every component that gets touched.
Mandatory replacements during the job:
Recommended-but-optional during the job:
Pricing varies by trim, engine generation, and what we find when we open it up. Typical ranges with quality parts:
We always quote in writing after we open the engine and see the actual condition. We don’t ambush customers with extras mid-job.
3–5 business days for the standard service. Longer if the heads need machining or if we discover additional issues (cracked heads, valve damage, etc.) during disassembly. We’ll communicate the schedule daily.
Short-term, yes — keep coolant topped off, watch the temperature gauge, and book the repair within a few weeks. Long-term driving with the leak risks the failure progressing to internal (coolant-in-oil), which causes engine damage.
Usually yes if the rest of the car is in decent shape. A Subaru with 180,000 miles and a fresh head gasket service plus refreshed timing belt/water pump can easily run another 100,000–150,000 miles. The math compares favorably to buying a replacement vehicle.
If you’re keeping the car 100,000+ more miles or you tow / off-road regularly, yes. The cost premium is small (~$200) and the head clamping force is significantly more consistent across temperature ranges. For a casual commuter who’ll sell the car in 5 years, factory bolts are fine.
Turbo EJ engines (EJ255, EJ257, EJ207) have a related but distinct failure profile. They tend to have more issues with ringland failure under boost than head gasket leaks — though both can happen. We service all turbo Subarus and treat each engine individually based on its actual condition.
If your vehicle is showing the symptoms in this post, the next step is a real diagnosis. Bring it in or book online.
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