This range covers an average Tire Rotation. Tell us your car to get a guaranteed price from RepairSmith.
When’s the last time you cracked open your owner’s manual and looked into rotating your tires? You should rotate your tires on a schedule. Your manufacturer may mandate that rotation schedule, but if not, wherever you get your tires installed will. So, you can do one of two things. You can follow that scheduled maintenance, or you can ignore it, and pay for new tires a lot sooner.
The entire purpose of a rotation is to help the tread of your tires wear and tear evenly. If they’re doing so unevenly - say, the right tires are wearing out far faster than the left ones, or the front tires look much different than the rear ones - that’s a sure sign that it’s time to rotate those things.
No, you’re not going crazy. If your tires are due for a rotation, it might feel like your car is pulling to the left or to the right all the time. In all likelihood, your car is actually doing that. And a likely culprit are your tires that are in dire need of being rotated.
Get a QuoteYou can keep driving your car when you need a tire rotation. For a while, it will be perfectly safe. But every mile you drive when you need a rotation is a mile that you’re causing uneven wear and tear to the tires, diminishing their lifespan, and pushing up the date of when you have to spend more money replacing them.