📋 Quick Snapshot
The Ram 1500 60000k service is the first heavy service: spark plugs (on many engines), transmission fluid, coolant, both differentials, transfer case, and brake fluid all come due in roughly the same window. Ram spec calls for engine oil at 8,000 mi on the Hemi, sooner under severe duty. The ZF 8HP transmission likes clean fluid: change it sooner than Ram's lifetime claim.
✅ What to Replace at 60,000 miles
The manufacturer service schedule for the Ram 1500 at 60,000 miles. Costs include parts and standard shop labor.
- Engine oil + filter. OEM-spec synthetic per manufacturer.
- Spark plugs. Iridium/platinum, replace as a set. Anti-seize on aluminum heads only when manufacturer allows.
- Transmission fluid (drain-and-fill). Use OEM-spec ATF. Full flushes on neglected fluid can dislodge debris.
- Brake fluid flush. Every 30-45k. Moisture content drives boil-over under hard braking.
- Coolant inspection. Test condition and pH. Replace if degraded.
- Differentials + transfer case (4WD). Synthetic gear oil per manufacturer spec.
- Brake pads / rotor inspection. Most trucks need pads in the 50-70k window.
📝 OEM Service Intervals & Costs
Real intervals pulled from manufacturer service schedules. DIY price is parts only; shop price includes parts and labor at a typical independent shop.
| Service Item | Interval | DIY Cost | Shop Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engine oil + filter (synthetic) | Every 5,000-7,500 mi | $40-$70 | $80-$140 |
| Spark plugs (set of 8 iridium) | 60,000-100,000 mi | $40-$120 | $220-$450 |
| Transmission fluid | 30,000-60,000 mi | $60-$140 | $180-$400 |
| Coolant flush | Every 60,000-100,000 mi | $25-$50 | $120-$220 |
| Brake fluid flush | Every 30,000 mi / 3 yr | $15 (kit) | $90-$160 |
| Differential fluid (front + rear) | 30,000-60,000 mi | $50-$110 | $180-$340 |
| Transfer case fluid (4WD) | 30,000-60,000 mi | $30-$60 | $120-$220 |
| Brake pads (per axle) | 30,000-70,000 mi | $40-$90 | $180-$350 |
💵 Dealer vs Independent Shop vs DIY (2026)
Same 60,000-mile service, three different prices. Independent shops will use OE-quality parts when you ask. The dealer markup is mostly labor rate and overhead, not better parts.
| Path | Total 60,000-mile service | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Dealer | $1,040-$2,520 | OEM parts, OEM fluids, warranty-grade documentation. Highest cost. |
| Independent shop | $800-$1,800 | Same OE-quality parts when you ask. Usually 25-40% cheaper than dealer. |
| DIY | $450-$1,100 | Parts only. Break-even on tool set is usually one brake job. |
⚙️ Essential vs Upsell
Not every line on a service estimate is necessary at this milestone. Here is what actually matters versus what shops add for margin.
✅ Essential (do this)
- Engine oil + filter on OEM spec
- Tire rotation and brake inspection
- Spark plugs and transmission fluid
- Differential and transfer case fluid on 4WD
- Brake fluid every 30-45k
⚠ Upsell (often skippable)
- Fuel system "cleaning" service
- Engine flush additive (rarely needed on synthetic)
- Nitrogen tire fill upgrade
- Power steering flush on EPS systems
- "Premium" wiper or air-filter packages
🔧 Ram Platform-Specific Items
Things the generic 60,000-mile service list will not catch on the Ram 1500.
- Hemi MDS lifter inspection (5.7L). Pull valve covers, inspect lifter rollers. Cheaper than waiting for a catastrophic failure.
- ZF 8HP70 fluid exchange. Mopar 68218925AB, full system flush 9-12 quarts. The transmission will outlast the engine if you do this.
- Spark plugs (16 plugs on 5.7L Hemi). Two per cylinder. Use OE Champion or NGK iridium.
- 3.6L Pentastar oil cooler/filter housing. Plastic housing warps and leaks oil into coolant. Aftermarket aluminum upgrade is the permanent fix.
🚗 Cars and Trucks Known to Hit 300,000+ Miles
These are the platforms that consistently cross 300,000 miles when fluids and timing components are kept current. None of them are magic. They share the same DNA: simple engines, durable transmissions, conservative tuning, and owners who actually do the maintenance.