{"title":"How to Check Brake Pads (Quick DIY Inspection)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/adulting/how-to-check-brake-pads","category":{"slug":"adulting","name":"Adulting"},"creator":{"name":"Budget Mechanic","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcLUM5xfFT4YirVEpMR32Qw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WzXjTrMu3lg"},"tldr":"Inspect your own brake pads in five minutes. Read pad thickness through the wheel, know when to replace, and skip the upsell. Full DIY walkthrough.","totalDurationSeconds":462,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Flashlight","Ruler or feeler gauge","Mechanic gloves"],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Peek At the Pad Through the Wheel Spokes","text":"Start with the easiest check - no jack, no tools beyond a flashlight. Crouch next to the front wheel and aim the light through the spokes at the brake caliper. You are looking for the spot where the brake pad meets the rotor disc.Many cars (especially sports cars and SUVs) have big open spoke gaps that give a clean view of the caliper face and the pad sitting against the rotor. Some cars have a plastic caliper cover that pops off in two seconds. If your wheel design gives you a clear view, you may be done with the whole inspection right here."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Spot the Pad Backing Plate vs the Friction Material","text":"A brake pad has two parts you need to tell apart. The metal backing plate is the steel slab the caliper squeezes against. The friction material is the softer layer bonded to it that actually grips the rotor when you brake. Look at the edge facing the rotor - the friction material is what you want to measure.Ignore the backing plate when you are reading thickness. If you only see metal touching metal, the friction material is already gone and you have caught it just in time. A faint metal-on-metal grinding noise on light braking is the audible version of the same warning."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Check the Pad From Behind the Caliper","text":"If the spoke view does not work on your car, turn the steering wheel hard left or right to swing the caliper out from behind the wheel. Some cars need you to lift the front with a jack and set jack stands to get under safely - never crawl under a car supported only by a jack, use jack stands every time.Once you have a view, use a flashlight or your phone camera zoomed in to inspect the contact point on the back side of the caliper. This is the same angle a mechanic gets on a lift, and it usually shows you more of the inboard pad than the spoke view does."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Pull a Wheel Off for a Clear Look (When Needed)","text":"If you still cannot see the pad clearly through the spokes or from behind, take the wheel off. Chock the rear wheels, loosen the lug nuts on the ground first, then jack the car at the manufacturer's lift point and set jack stands under the frame. With the wheel off, you can see the pad through the caliper vents.If your caliper has no access vents, remove the lower caliper bolt and swing the caliper up to expose both pad faces. Most modern caliper designs only need one bolt out for this swing-up trick. Support the caliper with a bungee or zip-tie so it does not hang on the brake hose."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Measure Pad Thickness (4mm+ Good, Under 3mm Replace)","text":"Hold a ruler or a feeler gauge against the friction material and read the thickness. A brand-new pad is about 12mm (half an inch). Mechanics often say replace at 4-5mm to play it safe, but you can drive safely down to 3mm if you keep checking. Below 3mm is the danger zone.Below 2mm and the wear indicator will start squealing on every stop - that little metal tab is designed to drag on the rotor and make noise so you cannot ignore it. Three millimeters is the same as two pennies stacked together if you want a quick field reference when you do not have a ruler."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Inspect Both Sides - Pads Wear Unevenly","text":"Just because the outboard pad looks fine does not mean the inboard pad is. Brake pads wear unevenly depending on caliper slide-pin condition, piston wear, and how the car has been driven. Always check both the inner and outer pad on the same wheel, then repeat the whole inspection on the wheel on the other side of the car.In the source video, Josh found one side with 5-6mm of life left and the other side almost down to metal on the same van, same day. If he had only checked the good side he would have driven away thinking everything was fine and then ruined the rotor on the bad side a week later. Catching the bad side saves a $200 rotor replacement."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Inspect the Rotor Surface for Grooves, Lips, and Pitting","text":"While you have a view of the pad, look at the rotor disc itself. The friction surface should be a uniform smooth grey. Light circular wear marks are normal and not a reason to replace the rotor. Real reasons to replace: deep grooves you can catch a fingernail in, a sharp lip around the outer edge of the disc, rust pitting where the pad rides, or blue heat-blueing across the face from severe overheating.If the rotor surface is smooth and uniform, the rotor is fine to reuse with the new pads. Shops will often recommend rotors with every pad job to cover liability and pad up the ticket - it is not always necessary. The rotor on most modern cars is good for two or three sets of pads."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Know When to DIY and When to Call a Mechanic","text":"You can confidently DIY new pads (and rotors if needed) on most cars with a basic socket set, a C-clamp to push the caliper piston back, and an afternoon. The job is mostly bolts on and bolts off - no fluid changes, no bleeding required if you do not disconnect the brake line.Take it to a shop when you see brake fluid leaking around the caliper, the caliper piston will not retract, you already hear grinding (metal on metal contact), the car pulls hard to one side under braking, or the pedal sinks slowly to the floor. Anything pulling, leaking, or already grinding is a real safety issue - book the appointment that week, do not put it off until the weekend."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-22T14:13:35.651Z","published":"2026-05-22T14:13:10.590Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}