Wheel Hub Shaft Seal

A wheel hub shaft seal keeps axle or hub lubricant inside while excluding water, road salt and abrasive dirt where a rotating shaft passes through a housing. Depending on axle design, it may seal a driven hub, steering knuckle, differential tube or wheel-bearing cavity. Some bearings are sealed units and use no separately serviceable hub shaft seal.

Select by registration or VIN, axle code, drive layout, build date, wheel position and original number. Confirm shaft diameter, housing bore, seal width, lip direction, dust lip, integrated encoder, wear sleeve and installation depth. A seal can share outer dimensions yet use a different lip material or offset that does not align with the running surface.

Oil on the inner wheel, brake backplate or tyre can indicate seal failure, but verify the source. Brake fluid from a wheel cylinder or caliper, excess grease, differential-cover leakage and hub damage can spread similarly. Any friction lining contaminated by axle oil or grease must be replaced; cleaning cannot restore predictable braking.

Inspect bearing play, shaft run-out, breather operation and the lip's running track. A blocked axle breather raises pressure and forces lubricant past a sound seal. Grooves, corrosion or pitting on the shaft quickly damage a new lip and may require a specified sleeve or shaft replacement.

Removal often involves brakes, hub, driveshaft, wheel bearing or axle shaft. Secure the vehicle, support heavy components and follow bearing-preload and single-use fastener procedures. Do not lever against precision bores, strike ABS encoders or let a shaft hang from a differential seal.

Install squarely with a driver that loads the correct rigid face, using approved lip lubricant only where stated. Set depth and direction exactly, renew disturbed gaskets and refill with the specified lubricant to the correct level. Verify hub torque, bearing adjustment, ABS wiring and brake operation, then check for leaks after a controlled test. Compatible wheel hub shaft seals are listed below.

Your Current Vehicle

Or

Select Your Vehicle

Wheel Hub Shaft Seal for Popular Car Brands

Vehicle Models and Options for Wheel Hub Shaft Seal

ford car parts

FORD TRANSIT

3 matching products

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT 126

1 matching product

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT 500

1 matching product

Iveco Car Parts

IVECO DAILY

1 matching product

Mercedes Benz Car Parts

MERCEDES-BENZ C-CLASS

1 matching product

Mercedes Benz Car Parts

MERCEDES-BENZ CLC-CLASS

1 matching product

Mercedes Benz Car Parts

MERCEDES-BENZ CLK

1 matching product

Mercedes Benz Car Parts

MERCEDES-BENZ G-CLASS

1 matching product

Mercedes Benz Car Parts

MERCEDES-BENZ SLK

1 matching product

Mercedes Benz Car Parts

MERCEDES-BENZ SPRINTER

1 matching product

Mercedes Benz Car Parts

MERCEDES-BENZ VARIO

1 matching product

Filter products

The highest price is £75.83
£
£

2 Products

The seal separates rotating driveline parts from road contamination

A flexible lip rides on a precisely finished shaft while its outer case remains fixed in the hub, knuckle or axle housing. Spring load and fluid pressure keep the lip in contact without excessive friction.

An outer dust lip protects the oil lip from grit. The space between them may require a specified grease, but overpacking can lift the lip or trap contamination.

Seal constructions

DesignFeatureApplicationService concern
Radial lip sealElastomer lip with garter spring.Axle shaft or hub oil retention.Lip direction and running surface.
Dual-lip sealSeparate oil and contaminant lips.Exposed road-side locations.Correct lubricant between lips.
Cassette/unitised sealMultiple lips run on integrated sleeve.Heavy-duty hubs and axles.Special installer and depth.
Seal with wear sleeveHardened sleeve provides new track.Approved grooved-shaft repair.Exact sleeve and seal pairing.
Encoder sealMagnetic ABS target incorporated.Wheel bearing/hub sensing.Encoder face must point to sensor.
Felt/labyrinth arrangementNon-contact or lightly contacting exclusion.Older/specialist hubs.Assembly and grease method differ.

How a radial lip retains oil

Contact band

The lip forms a narrow contact zone on the shaft. Microscopic geometry returns a thin oil film towards the fluid side. Roughness that is too high wears the lip; a polished groove prevents correct contact.

Material and temperature

Nitrile, fluoroelastomer and other materials tolerate different heat and lubricants. Choose the specified seal rather than identifying elastomer by colour.

Selection checklist

CheckVariationConsequence if wrong
Axle/hub typeDriven, non-driven, full-floating or unit bearing.Wrong location and retention.
Shaft and boreDiameter, tolerance and chamfer.Loose outer case or damaged lip.
Width/depthSeal sits at a defined axial position.Lip runs in groove or blocks passage.
Lip directionFluid side faces pressure source.Immediate leakage.
LubricantGear oil, hub oil or grease.Material swelling or poor lubrication.
ABS encoderIntegrated magnetic poles or separate ring.No wheel-speed signal.
Production/axle codeAlternative shafts within same model.Dimensions differ despite vehicle fit.

Proving the leak source

Clean the assembly and inspect the highest wet point. Axle oil has a characteristic odour and viscosity, but fluid identification should include level and source evidence. Brake fluid is generally thinner and water-miscible; do not rely on smell alone.

On full-floating hubs, oil can travel through bearing cavities before reaching the brake. On semi-floating axles, a housing-end seal may leak directly along the shaft and backplate.

Contaminated brakes

Oil-soaked drum shoes and porous pads cannot provide reliable friction after surface cleaning. Replace contaminated friction across the axle as required, clean or renew the drum/disc and correct the seal source.

Inspect rubber brake components for mineral-oil exposure. Keep solvent and axle lubricant away from wheel-cylinder and caliper seals.

Root causes beyond the seal

CauseEffect on sealCorrective evidence
Blocked axle breatherHeat raises housing pressure.Breather clear and routed correctly.
Worn bearingShaft moves radially through lip.Play/run-out within specification.
Grooved shaftLip cannot maintain continuous contact.Approved sleeve or renewed shaft.
Overfilled axleExcess oil and aeration increase leakage.Correct level on level ground.
Bent shaft/housingRun-out works and overheats lip.Geometry measurement after impact.
Wrong installation depthLip runs on damaged track.Set exact datum.
Damaged boreOil bypasses seal outer diameter.Repair housing by approved method.

Bearing and hub considerations

Some hubs use adjustable tapered bearings; others use a preloaded sealed unit. End float or nut torque procedures are not interchangeable. A nut that is tightened by generic “feel” can overheat a bearing or leave dangerous play.

Press force must pass through the correct race. Loading through balls or rollers damages a new bearing. Replace single-use hub nuts, bolts and retainers.

ABS encoder protection

A magnetic encoder can resemble a plain dark seal. Identify its sensor-facing side before pressing the bearing or seal. Keep iron filings, screwdrivers and strong magnets away.

Check wheel-speed data after assembly. A new mechanical seal does not guarantee the encoder or sensor gap survived the operation.

Safe dismantling sequence

  1. Confirm leak source, axle design, parts and bearing procedures.
  2. Secure and support the vehicle and heavy axle/hub components.
  3. Drain lubricant where required and remove brake friction safely.
  4. Mark flange, shaft and adjustment relationships.
  5. Release single-use nuts and retainers with approved holding tools.
  6. Withdraw shaft/hub without dragging splines across sealing surfaces.
  7. Remove the seal with a puller that does not gouge the bore.
  8. Inspect shaft track, bearings, breather, housing and lubricant debris.
  9. Protect open differential and bearing cavities from dirt.
  10. Clean the bore using non-damaging methods.

Installing the new seal

Check lip direction and installation depth twice. Cover sharp splines or keyways with the specified sleeve so they do not cut the lip. Apply approved oil or grease to the lip only as instructed; some PTFE-type seals require dry installation.

Use a driver close to the outer rigid shell and press evenly. Hammering one edge folds the case. A unitised seal may require a tool that controls both sections and must not be separated.

Shaft sleeves and repair limits

An approved thin wear sleeve can provide a fresh surface when shaft dimensions and damage fall within its system limits. Install it squarely with the dedicated tool and remove any flange only as directed.

Deep pitting, bending, cracks or spline damage need shaft replacement. Polishing aggressively reduces diameter and lip interference.

Checks after kerb or road impact

A seal leak that begins after impact can be evidence of more than a cut lip. Measure hub and shaft run-out, inspect the knuckle or axle tube, check wheel and tyre condition and verify suspension alignment. Replacing the seal without correcting a bent rotating surface can produce immediate leakage, wheel-speed faults and repeated bearing wear.

Look for witness marks where the shaft, encoder or housing has moved. Follow manufacturer limits rather than trying to straighten a safety-critical hub or axle component in place.

Lubricant refill

Use the exact viscosity and axle approval, including limited-slip friction requirements where specified. Additives should not be improvised. Fill on level ground to the vehicle procedure, allowing oil to distribute through hub cavities where required.

Overfill is not extra protection. Temperature expansion and churning can force oil through vents and seals.

Post-repair checks

CheckPass conditionFailure action
Hub rotation/playSmooth and within end-float specification.Recheck bearing assembly/preload.
Brake pedalFirm before vehicle movement.Inspect assembly and hydraulics.
Wheel speedPlausible and stable from low speed.Check encoder orientation and sensor.
Lubricant levelStable after distribution and cool-down.Find leak or fill error.
Seal areaDry after heat cycle/road test.Stop and inspect root cause.
Hub temperatureComparable and not excessive.Investigate preload, brake drag or lubrication.

Common mistakes

  • Replacing the seal without clearing the axle breather.
  • Reusing oil-contaminated brake shoes.
  • Driving the seal against its flexible face.
  • Installing the oil lip or encoder backwards.
  • Dragging sharp splines through the new lip.
  • Ignoring bearing play and shaft grooves.
  • Guessing hub-nut preload or reusing single-use hardware.
  • Overfilling the axle after repair.

Urgency, road safety and MOT

Do not drive with lubricant on brake friction, a loose/noisy bearing, rapid oil loss or an overheating hub. A failed seal can progress from a small leak to bearing seizure or serious brake imbalance.

Wheel-bearing condition, braking performance, fluid leakage and insecure hub components are relevant to UK MOT inspection. Repair and clean the complete affected system rather than hiding residue.

Wheel hub shaft seal FAQs

Q: What does a wheel hub shaft seal do?
A: It retains lubricant around a rotating shaft while excluding road contamination.

Q: Does oil on the brake prove seal failure?
A: It strongly suggests a driveline leak, but identify the exact source and fluid.

Q: Can oil-soaked brake shoes be cleaned?
A: No. Replace contaminated friction and correct the leak.

Q: Why can a blocked breather cause leakage?
A: Pressure rises as the axle warms and forces oil past the lip.

Q: Can a grooved shaft use a new seal?
A: It may need an approved wear sleeve or shaft replacement first.

Q: Which way does the lip face?
A: The main oil lip normally faces the retained lubricant, but follow exact instructions.

Q: Should the lip always be greased?
A: No. Some seal types require a specified lubricant and others install dry.

Q: Can a seal include an ABS encoder?
A: Yes, and its magnetic face must point towards the sensor.

Q: Does the hub nut need replacement?
A: Often yes; follow the vehicle's single-use and preload procedure.

Q: Can the axle be overfilled for safety?
A: No. Overfill can increase aeration, heat and leakage.

Q: What should be checked after fitting?
A: Bearing play, brake operation, wheel-speed signal, temperature and leakage.

Q: Is a small hub leak safe to monitor?
A: It can contaminate brakes and starve bearings, so diagnose promptly.

Q: Can a hub-seal fault affect the MOT?
A: Related leakage, brake contamination or bearing defects can affect inspection.