- 🔑Prius Key Fob🚙🚙NO ELECTRONICS INSIDE-Just EMPTY key fob with a blank key. ❗No electronics, chip or battery inside. Fit for 2004-2009 Toyota Prius.
- 🔑Prius Key Fob🚙🚙NO NEED TO PROGRAM-Transfer the inside 3 PARTS-electronics, battery and chips from your original key and get the new blank key cut, then done. You can search video "Prius Key Fob" in YouTube for reference. DO NOT FORGET THE SMALL CHIP.
- 🔑Prius Key Fob🚙🚙WHERE TO GET THE KEY CUT-The dealership, a locksmith, or your local Ace Hardware.
- 🔑Prius Key Fob🚙🚙MUST READ-Just a replacement, not OEM one. No logo on the fob back side.
- 🔑Prius Key Fob🚙🚙We can offer a brand new item to you during 6+1 months. Please feel free to contact us by email if you have any questions,we will solve it for you within 24 HRS.
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Jacob Martinez
Saved myself $300 from a trip to the dealers.
Super easy installation. I wish I would’ve recorded it. I did it for my husband while he was taking a nap. I have a 2004 Toyota Prius and it works 100%! Just beware there is no battery that comes with it. I just used my old battery from my old remote since it worked. Only tip I have is just be careful not to damage the green motherboard. Aside from that I would definitely recommend.
Tara Woods
Works Great!
We got it all together and it works! Keep in mind that it wasn’t super easy. We basically had to break our other key fob just to get the circuit board. Once you get it open, it’s easy to switch out, but you have to be careful not to damage the circuit board in the process.
Sennen Cancerian Salise
Exactly what you need!!
I love this cover. You will not be disappointed. You can actually use the same back cover from your original, so you can have the Toyota emblem.
Lori Kirkpatrick Finney
Excellent product with tight tolerances so close to OEM, that parts are interchangeable.
Manufactured precisely enough that I was able to slide my old metal key, and back panel onto this new shell. Very pleased. Buttons are a little stiffer than the rubber membrane ones from my OEM, but they work fine. The OEM buttons in their rubber membrane cracked and tore anyway. Use a large screwdriver in the square side holes and twist the old key apart (it will pop). Then using a very small screwdriver, blade or similar instrument to gently coax the circuit board out of the old shell. I twisted and bent the old case a bit to encourage it to release the board. The RFID chip is a small piece in the very tip of the other half of the shell. Very easy to remove and put into the new shell. 5 minute job for me with jewelers screwdrivers! Note: Screws from OEM do not fit into this one, so they provide 5 screws for you (4 needed, 1 spare).
Beth Marie Herrera
Easy job and worth the money
My key was very old and beat up with missing buttons. I was very scared and didnt know if i was gonna be able to pull it off but I did. I have precision tools so that made the job easier for me. I took it all apart and installed everything on the new case, i did notice that the new case doesnt have the toyota logo in the back so i was able to fit the back piece from my old case and it fits perfectly fine. I replaced the battery since I was already there. it uses CR2032 battery I made sure to install everything carefully and I didnt have to do any programming, key was working just fine as if i hadnt done anything to it. so now I have a new sturdy case with a toyota logo in the back. The metal key is plain so you have to take it somewhere to copy your old one and you can just save it as an extra, or you can just do what i did and put it away and just use the old one since it fits into the nee casing.
Bhawna Masson
Prius Fob for my Vehicle
My previous fob was falling apart but the electronics were still intact. This was the ideal solution to my problem. Follow the instructions carefully when removing the old electronics as they can be damaged easily as they are glued in place. Instructions can be found online, be sure to remove both parts. Putting everything back together was easy, though I did not glue the electronics back in place. This should make it much easier if I ever need to replace the fob again. I used my old key since it still works but it does come with a new key. If your electronics are damaged this becomes a more difficult and costly replacement so when your fob is slightly damaged this will be the ideal solution and save you hundreds of dollars.
Adella Barnum
Where has this been hiding for the last few years?
Our 2 keys, almost 12 year old keys, looked like 12 year old keys. The cases were cracked and broken, they were duct taped together, and the remote functions only worked sporadically. I had been to the dealer and was told that between the cost of the new electronic keys and the programming, we were looking at $300-$400, times 2! I only started looking again because the keyless entry and the keyless ignition were no longer working, at all. I tried ebay and came away with basically the same information as the dealer. So when I found this "shell", I was skeptical at best. I bought only 1 just in case, as I suspected, it wouldn't work. When it got here, I found the instructions to remove the motherboard and the ignition piece on youtube and putting them into the new "shell" couldn't have been easier! It worked like a brand new $300-$400 remote! I ordered the second one immediately! And although many have said that you can't use the old manual metal key in the new remote, our old ones fit just fine, so we didn't even have to see a locksmith to get the new blanks cut!
JoAnna Wass
Great FOB replacement for my ‘05 Prius
This was great. Incredible price, and works exactly as described. Getting my old one open was a lot harder than expected. Once I got it open I followed the directions and all was good. I reused my old key so I did not need to get the key cut. Slight hitch with the mechanism that hold the key in, but I was able to wiggle it into place. Overall this was really a great cheap option to replace my 2005 fob that has buttons all worn out.
Crystal Marie Perkins
Sooo worth the time and money!
Please watch the YouTube videos. There are three parts to this fob. Slide opening. Screw battery cover and a third part that allows you to put this tiny little, black “magnet” looking part that is the brains of your remote. Without it, your remote will not work. Replace it, the circuit board and your battery. Then put it all back together. You will not have to reprogram anything. Just don’t forget that tiny, nothing looking piece. The worst part was prying the main two pieces apart and praying I didn’t break the memory board. The original Toyota back fits onto the new pieces. Original key fits, as well.
Jess Alderwood
An **Exact** Duplicate of Prius Key Housing
I'm an electrical engineer who is involved daily with creating plastic housings for electronic stuff. My hat is off to the folks that created this item. It is an **exact** duplicate of Toyota's Gen II Prius key housing. They even cloned the battery insertion fine graphics on the internal parts. I would give this item ten stars if I could. The only negative is that it comes with no assembly instructions, so you're on your own. I would offer these assembly comments to others who purchase it: 1. It reuses the circuit board of your existing Toyota key and the rubber O ring around the battery. It also reuses the RFID chip, which is buried in one end of the Toyota housing. 2. The Toyota housing is glued together but comes apart easily if you use needle-nosed pliers as a spreading tool. Rather than squeezing the handles of the pliers together as you do in normal use, you spread the handles of the pliers apart with your fingers to force the pliers' tips apart. Wedge the pliers' tips into alcoves in the Toyota housing. 3. The RFID chip is a black 5 sided thing about the size of an M&M. It's inside the Toyota housing, buried into an alcove on one end. Dig it out of the adhesive with a tiny-bladed screwdriver. Apply some glue to it when you transfer it to the new housing. 4. The new housing snaps together but not securely enough to remain closed while rolling around in your jeans pocket. I glued my new housing back together with superglue. 5. Don't reuse Toyota's screws on the battery door. Use the ones that came with the new housing. They have slightly different threads. If Toyota's key fob vendor comes after these guys with lawyers, I'll contribute to a Go Fund Me campaign to help defend them. Toyota's price of a replacement fob is extortionate. And the quality of this copy is excellent.