The complete Chevy Silverado 1500 maintenance schedule for the T1XX generation — all four powertrains covered, confirmed OEM part numbers, severe-condition adjustments, and what every L87 6.2L V8 owner needs to know about the GM recall oil viscosity change.
The Chevy Silverado 1500 maintenance schedule for the T1XX generation covers America's second best-selling vehicle — and one of the most powertrain-diverse trucks on the road. The 4th gen Silverado launched for 2019 with V8 options, then added the 2.7L turbo-four, the 3.0L Duramax inline-six diesel, and the controversial 6.2L L87 V8 that's now the subject of a major GM recall affecting hundreds of thousands of trucks.
This guide covers every powertrain, every interval, and every confirmed OEM part number — so you can maintain your Silverado correctly whether you own the fuel-sipping 2.7L Turbo, the workhorse 5.3L V8, the towing-capable 6.2L V8, or the efficient Duramax diesel. And if you have a 2021–2024 6.2L, the L87 recall section is mandatory reading: GM has changed the spec'd oil viscosity, and getting it wrong can affect both warranty coverage and engine longevity.
T1XX is GM's internal platform code for the 4th generation Silverado 1500 covering 2019–2025 (and the related GMC Sierra 1500, Tahoe, Suburban, Yukon, and Cadillac Escalade). It distinguishes this generation from the K2XX platform (2014–2018), which used different oil filters, air filters, and spark plug specs on some engines. If you see T1XX in your VIN documentation or on forums, you're in the right place.
Chevy Silverado 1500 Maintenance Schedule 2019–2025 at a Glance
Factory-recommended service intervals for all 2019–2025 Silverado 1500 T1XX models under normal driving conditions. Chevrolet uses an Oil Life Monitor (OLM) rather than a fixed mileage interval — most owners see oil change service called for between 5,000 and 7,500 miles depending on driving style, or every 12 months whichever comes first. Under severe conditions, expect the OLM to call for service much sooner.
| Interval | Service Item | Notes & OEM Part # |
|---|---|---|
| Per OLM / 12 mo | Engine Oil & Filter Change | 5.3L/6.2L: PF63 · 2.7L Turbo: PF66 · 3.0L Duramax: dedicated filter |
| 7,500 mi | Tire Rotation | Rotate every oil change. Critical on 4WD models for even wear. |
| Every 6 months | Visual Brake Inspection | Inspect pad thickness; replace at ≤2mm. Inspect more often if towing. |
| 22,500 mi | Cabin Air Filter | 84528586 — all T1XX trims. Replace annually in dusty regions. |
| 15,000 mi | 12V Battery Inspection | Inspect terminals and load capacity. Replace every 3–5 years. |
| 45,000 mi | Engine Air Filter | 84121219 — fits 5.3L/6.2L V8. Replace sooner under dusty/severe use. |
| 45,000 mi | Brake Fluid Inspection | Replace if moisture content exceeds 3%. Every 2 years for severe use. |
| 45,000 mi | 4WD Transfer Case Fluid | 4WD models. Inspect for leaks; replace if discolored or burnt. |
| 45,000 mi | Front & Rear Differential Fluid | Severe service or towing. Inspect at 45k, replace by 60k for towing use. |
| 97,500 mi | Spark Plugs — 5.3L L84 / 6.2L L87 | Iridium plugs. ACDelco 41-114. Qty: 8. Replace at 97,500 miles. |
| 45,000 mi | Spark Plugs — 2.7L Turbo | Turbo engine — shorter interval. Verify part number by VIN. |
| 45,000 mi | Automatic Transmission Fluid | Severe/towing use. 8L90, 10L80, or 10L90 depending on year/engine. Dexron HP. |
| 150,000 mi | Engine Coolant (Dex-Cool) | Long-life orange Dex-Cool. Inspect at 100,000 miles. |
| Every 3 years | Brake Fluid Replacement | DOT 3 per owner's manual. Every 2 years for towing or severe use. |
| Duramax Only | Fuel Filter Replacement | 3.0L LM2/LZ0 — replace per filter life monitor or every 25,000 miles. |
| Duramax Only | DEF (Diesel Exhaust Fluid) | Refill as needed — typically every 4,000–6,000 miles depending on use. |
| L87 Recall | Oil Viscosity Change | 2021–2024 6.2L only. Inspection + 0W-40 Dexos R if engine passes. See recall section ▼ |
Silverado T1XX Oil Change Guide by Powertrain
The most important thing to know before your first DIY oil change on the Silverado: each powertrain takes a different oil filter, a different capacity, and in some cases a completely different oil viscosity. The 5.3L V8 and 6.2L V8 share a filter, but the 2.7L Turbo uses a different one and takes 5W-30 instead of 0W-20. The Duramax diesel needs Dexos D, not Dexos1. And the 6.2L L87's oil spec now depends on whether your truck is part of the 2021–2024 recall. Confirm your engine first.
The 2.7L L3B turbocharged 4-cylinder takes 5W-30 Dexos1 Gen 3, not 0W-20 like the 5.3L and 6.2L V8s. This trips up DIYers who assume all modern Chevy gas engines run the same thin oil. The 2.7L Turbo runs hot and hard under load, and GM specced the heavier 30-weight at operating temperature to maintain a thicker protective film across the bearings and turbocharger. Substituting 0W-20 leaves the engine running thinner than designed at full operating temp, which is exactly when a turbocharged 4-cylinder needs protection most. Capacity is also different — 6 quarts, not 8. The owner's manual and oil fill cap will both confirm 5W-30. Always read the cap.
The L87 6.2L Recall Oil Change Explained
If you own a 2021, 2022, 2023, or 2024 Silverado 1500 with the 6.2L L87 V8, your truck is part of GM safety recall N252494000 (NHTSA 24V-795), which addresses manufacturing defects in the connecting rods and crankshaft that can cause catastrophic engine failure. As part of the recall remedy, GM has changed the recommended oil viscosity for engines that pass dealer inspection — and getting this wrong matters for both engine longevity and warranty coverage.
What Every 6.2L Owner Needs to Know
The recall affects roughly 600,000 GM trucks and SUVs. The remedy depends on what your engine inspection finds.
How to Know Which Oil Your L87 Takes Right Now
The simplest answer: read your oil fill cap. If your truck has been through the recall inspection and the engine passed, your dealer will have replaced the original fill cap with a new one labeled "USE 0W-40 ONLY" and inserted documentation into your owner's manual confirming the change. If your fill cap still shows the original 0W-20 marking, your truck either hasn't been processed yet, your engine was replaced (in which case 0W-20 is correct), or your truck is a 2019, 2020, or 2025 model that isn't part of the recall.
For 2021–2024 owners who haven't yet received recall service: continue running the oil currently in your engine until the dealer performs the inspection. Don't preemptively switch to 0W-40 without going through the recall process — the inspection is the critical step, and switching oil yourself doesn't fix a defective engine. Schedule the recall service through your nearest Chevrolet dealer at no cost to you.
Your truck is not part of the L87 recall. Continue using 0W-20 Dexos1 Gen 3 as originally specified. Switching to 0W-40 on a non-recalled engine is not a manufacturer-approved change and could affect warranty coverage. The 2025 model year was built after GM's June 2024 manufacturing improvements were implemented — these trucks are not affected by the rod and crankshaft defects.
Engine Air Filter & Cabin Air Filter
Engine Air Filter
Replace per the air filter life monitor or every 45,000 miles on V8 models under normal conditions. If you drive on dusty roads, work sites, or unpaved surfaces, inspect at 22,500 miles and replace as needed. The 5.3L and 6.2L V8s share the same air box and use OEM part 84121219 (or the earlier 23349505 on early production trucks). The 2.7L Turbo and 3.0L Duramax use different filters — verify by VIN before ordering.
Cabin Air Filter — 84528586
Replace every 22,500 miles or annually, whichever comes first. Located behind the glove box on T1XX Silverados, replacement is a 5-minute job with no tools required. Signs it's overdue: reduced airflow from vents, musty smell with the AC running, or visible debris when removed.
OEM part 84528586 fits all 2019–2025 Silverado 1500 T1XX models regardless of cab configuration or powertrain. If you spend time near construction zones, dusty job sites, or in wildfire smoke regions, inspect annually and replace sooner than the standard interval.
Spark Plugs: Interval & OEM Part Numbers
The 5.3L L84 and 6.2L L87 V8 engines use long-life iridium spark plugs with a generous 97,500-mile replacement interval. The 2.7L L3B turbocharged engine runs a shorter interval — turbocharged engines are harder on plugs and Chevrolet specs replacement around 45,000 miles. The Duramax diesel has no spark plugs (it uses glow plugs, which are inspected at major service but rarely replaced).
| Engine | Models | OEM Part # | Interval | Qty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.3L L84 V8 | LT · RST · LTZ · Trail Boss · High Country | ACDelco 41-114 | 97,500 mi | 8 |
| 6.2L L87 V8 | LTZ · Trail Boss · High Country · ZR2 | ACDelco 41-114 | 97,500 mi | 8 |
| 2.7L L3B Turbo | WT · Custom · RST | Confirm by VIN | 45,000 mi | 4 |
| 3.0L Duramax Diesel | LM2 · LZ0 | N/A — diesel | Glow plugs inspected only | — |
The iridium spark plugs used in the 5.3L and 6.2L V8s are factory pre-gapped and should not be adjusted manually. Re-gapping iridium plugs can fracture the delicate iridium tip and dramatically shorten plug life. If a plug appears mis-gapped out of the box, return it — don't bend the electrode.
3.0L Duramax Diesel Maintenance
The 3.0L Duramax inline-six diesel — known internally as LM2 for 2020–2022 and LZ0 for 2023 onward — adds significant fuel economy and torque to the Silverado lineup, but it also adds maintenance complexity that gas owners don't deal with. The Duramax has a fuel filter, a DEF (Diesel Exhaust Fluid) system, glow plugs, and uses a different oil specification than any of the gasoline engines.
Beyond the Standard Silverado Schedule
These items apply to the 3.0L Duramax only and are in addition to standard oil, filter, and tire service.
One important note for Duramax owners: do not substitute Dexos1 Gen 3 (gasoline spec) for Dexos D (diesel spec). The two oils are formulated for different combustion chemistries and aftertreatment systems. Diesel-spec oil is required to maintain proper DPF (Diesel Particulate Filter) function, and using the wrong oil can lead to ash accumulation, premature DPF blockage, and expensive repairs. Always confirm your oil container shows "Dexos D" on the label.
If your Diesel Exhaust Fluid tank runs empty, the Silverado's emissions system will progressively limit engine power and eventually prevent the truck from starting at all. Refill before the warning thresholds — the dash will alert you well in advance. Use only ISO 22241 certified DEF, available at any auto parts store and most truck stops.
Silverado Severe Condition Maintenance Schedule
Chevrolet defines severe driving conditions as any combination of: frequent towing or hauling heavy loads, extended idling, dusty or off-road environments, frequent short trips, extreme cold or hot climates, or stop-and-go city traffic. If your Silverado falls into any of these categories — and let's be honest, most working trucks do — the standard OLM-driven schedule should be supplemented with shorter manual intervals.
| Service Item | Normal Interval | Severe Interval |
|---|---|---|
| Engine Oil & Filter | Per OLM (~5,000–7,500 mi) | 3,000–5,000 mi / 6 mo |
| Engine Air Filter | 45,000 mi | 22,500 mi or per inspection |
| Cabin Air Filter | 22,500 mi / 1 yr | 15,000 mi or per inspection |
| Brake Fluid | Every 3 years | Every 2 years |
| Transmission Fluid | 45,000 mi (severe) | 30,000 mi for towing |
| Front/Rear Differential | Inspect at 45,000 mi | Replace at 45,000 mi |
| Transfer Case Fluid (4WD) | 45,000 mi | 30,000 mi for towing |
| Tire Rotation | 7,500 mi | 6,000 mi |
The Oil Life Monitor on the T1XX Silverado is reasonably accurate but tends to be more generous than seasoned owners prefer for trucks that tow regularly. If you tow over 5,000 lbs frequently, consider a manual override at 5,000 miles even if the OLM still shows life remaining. Heat from sustained high-load operation breaks down oil faster than normal commuting, and the OLM can lag the actual condition of the oil under those conditions.
Chevy Silverado 1500 T1XX OEM Part Numbers 2019–2025
All confirmed OEM part numbers for the 4th gen Silverado 1500. Using genuine ACDelco and GM parts ensures proper fit, maintains your warranty, and avoids fitment issues — particularly important on the 6.2L L87 where the recall has introduced both an oil viscosity change and updated documentation requirements.
Chevy Silverado 1500 Maintenance Schedule — FAQ
The questions 2019–2025 Silverado owners search most — answered directly, for all four powertrains.