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Coachbuilder

Coachbuilder is the Tundra-specialist shop: +2" shackles, progressive bump stops, and steering refinements that solve the platform’s known quirks with US-made hardware. The catalog is small and surgical — see our Tundra collection for how these pieces finish a full-size build.

Shopping a four-product collection

This Coachbuilder collection is four listings deep, which makes it the rare page you can read in full — so do exactly that, including the parts you didn't come for. Small collections are dense by nature, and the part you need isn't always the one you searched. Give every listing a proper read before you rule anything out. Run the year/make/model filter anyway; it's one click, and it confirms fitment properly instead of leaving you squinting at product photos and guessing.

What to check before ordering

The same three things that matter anywhere in the store — they just go faster here. Fitment first: years and trims are listed on each product page, and that list is the final word. Included hardware second, so you know exactly what arrives in the box and what you're expected to supply. Install notes third: tools, time, and whether the job is driveway-grade or shop-grade. With four products, you can run that diligence on the entire collection in ten minutes and order with zero guesswork, which is a luxury the two-hundred-product categories never offer.

If nothing here fits your rig

No harm done — this is one small corner of the store. The full accessories collection covers the same territory at many times the width, and the vehicle pages gather everything we carry for a specific platform: Toyota Tundra, Toyota Tacoma, and the rest. Starting from your truck's page is honestly the better habit anyway — it filters the whole store down to confirmed-fit parts, this collection included when it applies.

Coachbuilder FAQs

Why are there only a few products in this collection?

Because that's what we stock from the Coachbuilder line — no filler listings to pad the page. Small collections are normal in this hobby, and plenty of good parts come from narrow catalogs. The upside is speed: you can read every listing, compare honestly, and decide in minutes. Width matters when you're browsing; it stops mattering once you've found the right part.

What should I verify on a product page before ordering?

Three things: the fitment list, the included-parts rundown, and the install notes. Fitment tells you whether it's confirmed for your exact year and trim — treat that list as final. The included-parts section tells you what ships in the box versus what you supply. Install notes cover tools and time. If any of the three reads unclear, ask before you order.

Nothing here fits my vehicle — where should I look instead?

Start from your vehicle's own collection page, which filters the whole store down to parts confirmed for your platform. That's the fastest route to everything relevant, this collection included whenever it applies. Browsing the broader accessories category works too if you shop by problem instead. Either way, the wide catalog serves you better than forcing a part from a narrow one.