Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV high beam headlight uses 9005 bulb size while low beam headlight requires H7 bulb size. The chart covers 2018 to 2022 replacement specifications for these headlight bulbs.
The year-by-year compatibility chart below provides a quick reference to verify the correct bulb size for your vehicle.
The 9005 bulb is the specified high beam size for the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV across the 2018-2022 model years. It operates at 12 volts and 65 watts, uses a single filament, and is built to the ANSI standard used in the United States and Canada. Its base type is P20d.
The H7 bulb is the specified low beam size across the same 2018-2022 span. It also uses a single filament and runs at 12 volts, but draws 55 watts rather than 65, making it less powerful than the 9005 used in the high beam position. Its base type is PX26d.
The H7 is an ECE-standard bulb originating from European and worldwide regulatory frameworks, though it carries approval for use in the United States and Japan as well. The 9005, by contrast, is strictly an ANSI-standard type.
Because the 9005 and H7 use different base types, P20d and PX26d respectively, the two bulbs are not interchangeable with each other. Each is designed to seat only in its corresponding socket, which prevents accidental installation in the wrong headlight position.
The 2019 Outlander PHEV high beam specification carries a "With Halogen Capsule Headlamps" qualifier, indicating that the 9005 fitment applies specifically to vehicles equipped with that headlamp configuration rather than to all 2019 units.
The low beam H7 specification for the 2020-2022 model years shows a split in qualifier usage. The 2020 entry retains the "With Halogen Capsule Headlamps" condition, while the 2021 and 2022 entries carry no such qualifier, reflecting a difference in how the fitment is documented across those years.
The 2018 high beam specification lists the 9005 without any trim or equipment qualifier, while the 2018 low beam H7 entry does carry the "With Halogen Capsule Headlamps" condition. This means the two positions for the same model year are documented under different fitment conditions.