These instructions apply to the Kia Sorento Mk4 (MQ4) 2020-Present. For other models, please choose your vehicle here.
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The Kia Sorento (Mk4/MQ4, 2020–Present) carries a fully electronic parking brake, but with an important twist: like several larger Kias it uses a separate drum-in-hat parking-brake shoe inside the rear disc, driven by an electric motor — not a motor that pushes directly on the service pads. That changes what “service mode” means here, so this guide is specific to the MQ4 rather than a generic EPB write-up.
How the MQ4 Sorento EPB works and why it needs a scan tool
On the Mk4 Sorento the foot-brake caliper and the parking brake are two systems sharing one rear wheel. The EPB motor expands a small set of shoes against a drum machined into the centre of the rear disc; the regular hydraulic caliper still does the stopping. Because of this, retracting the EPB and renewing the pads are two related but distinct jobs.
To change the rear pads you put the EPB into its service / release state so the shoes are slack and out of the way, then deal with the hydraulic caliper. There is no owner button sequence for this on the MQ4. Kia does not provide a dash-only service mode; the manufacturer-correct method is a scan tool (KDS or a capable aftermarket EPB tool) on the OBD2 port. The same applies if you ever renew the parking-brake shoes themselves — Kia requires a tool-driven shoe-adjustment routine afterwards, and skipping it can prematurely kill the EPB module.
- Park on level ground, chock the front wheels, switch the ignition ON (engine off), turn AUTO HOLD off, and release the EPB.
- Connect the scan tool to the OBD2 socket under the dash and select Sorento / MQ4 / EPB.
- Run the release / service routine so the parking-brake mechanism is fully backed off.
- Raise the car, remove the rear wheels, and renew the pads on the hydraulic caliper, compressing those pistons normally (they are not the EPB pistons on this car).
- If you also renewed the parking-brake shoes, run Kia’s EPB shoe-adjustment routine on the tool before finishing.
Critical warning: never force any EPB component back by hand. On the drum-in-hat MQ4 that means do not try to mechanically collapse the parking-brake shoes or wind the actuator closed manually — retract and adjust it electronically through the tool. Forcing the mechanism damages the actuator and throws the shoe adjustment out, which leads to early EPB module failure.
Exit and bed-in: close the EPB through the tool so the shoes return to their set position, then pump the brake pedal until firm and cycle the EPB on and off twice to confirm it holds the car. Bed the new pads with several gentle slow-downs from about 30–40 mph and avoid hard stops for the first hundred miles. After a shoe job, confirm the EPB holds on a slight incline before relying on it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the Sorento EPB push on the brake pads? No — the MQ4 uses a separate drum-in-hat shoe for the parking brake, so the EPB motor and the service-brake pistons are different parts.
Can I enter service mode with the dash switch alone? No. The MQ4 has no owner button sequence; you need a scan tool on the OBD2 port.
Do I still need the tool if I’m only changing the rear pads, not the shoes? Yes, to release the EPB cleanly — and if you disturbed the shoes you must also run the Kia shoe-adjustment routine.
Why does Kia insist on a shoe-adjustment step? A poorly adjusted parking-brake shoe overworks the EPB actuator and is a known cause of premature module failure on these vehicles.
Is this the same as on the Sportage? No — the smaller Sportage uses a motor-on-caliper EPB, while the larger Sorento uses the drum-in-hat shoe design, so the procedures differ.
If a brake or EPB warning stays on after the work, read the stored fault first at autodtcs.com to see whether it is a calibration message or a genuine actuator fault.
Disclaimer: The information on this page is provided for general guidance only. Always follow your official service manual and safety precautions when working on your vehicle. We are not responsible for errors, omissions, or any damage resulting from the use of this information.
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