{"title":"How to Rotate Tires at Home (Step-by-Step Pattern Guide)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/adulting/how-to-rotate-tires","category":{"slug":"adulting","name":"Adulting"},"creator":{"name":"Ratchets And Wrenches","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCT5dv3iwFuy041dbWPB6skg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlwN1YCglzc"},"tldr":"Rotate your tires at home in an hour. FWD, RWD, and AWD patterns explained, plus the one step every other video misses. Full DIY walkthrough.","totalDurationSeconds":519,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Hydraulic floor jack","Jack stands (pair)","Lug wrench or impact wrench","Torque wrench","Wheel chocks","Tire pressure gauge","Mechanic gloves"],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Check Steering and Suspension First","text":"Before you rotate anything, look over your steering and suspension components. Check for play in the inner and outer tie rods, the upper and lower ball joints, the shocks or struts, and the bushings. A worn component on one corner is already chewing up that one tire. If you rotate a worn tire onto the bad corner, you end up with two damaged tires - then three, then four.Get the bad component fixed first, then rotate. Same goes for alignment. If your alignment is off, no rotation pattern will save you - you will just smear the bad wear across all four tires evenly. Inspect, fix, then rotate."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Check if Your Tires Are Directional","text":"Most cars have non-directional tires, but performance tires, summer tires, and snow tires are often directional. Look at the sidewall for an arrow and the word ROTATION, or check the tread pattern - directional tires have V-shaped grooves pointing one way for water drainage.If your tires are directional, they can only be rotated front-to-back on the same side of the car. You cannot move a directional tire to the opposite side without dismounting it from the wheel and remounting it. Driving a directional tire mounted backwards is loud, dangerous in the rain, and pointless."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Check Front and Rear Tire Sizes Match","text":"Before rotating, read the tire size printed on each sidewall. Do not trust what the owner's manual says - someone may have put a different size tire on at a previous service. Compare the sidewall numbers on all four tires.If the front and rear sizes differ (common on some sports cars, or on cars where someone only replaced the rears), you cannot do a front-to-back rotation at all. You can only swap left-to-right within the same axle. Forcing different sizes between front and rear causes drivability problems and possible drivetrain damage on AWD cars - the differential burns up trying to compensate for the size mismatch."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Pick the Right Pattern - FWD, RWD, or AWD","text":"Each drivetrain has its own pattern. On a front-wheel drive car, move the front tires straight to the back, then crisscross the rear tires up to the front. On a rear-wheel drive car, reverse it - move the rears straight to the front and crisscross the fronts to the back.On AWD or 4WD, use the rear-wheel drive pattern (rears straight forward, fronts crisscross to back). Do NOT use the simple left-right swap some people recommend for AWD - that pattern keeps two tires permanently up front and two permanently in the back, which defeats the whole point of rotating. Every tire needs to visit every corner over time."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Rotate Every 5,000 to 7,000 Miles","text":"Most tire manufacturers recommend rotating every 5,000 to 7,000 miles. Stick to 5,000 miles if you want a number to put on the calendar. Many DIYers rotate at every oil change, which is close enough for most modern cars on a 5,000-mile oil interval.Mark the date and mileage in your phone or in the maintenance log so you actually do it. The whole point of rotation is even wear across all four tires over time, and that only works if you stay on a schedule. Skipping rotations is the number-one reason people end up replacing tires at 30,000 miles instead of 50,000 - the front pair wears down to bald while the rears still have half their life."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Lift Safely With Jack Stands - Never Just a Jack","text":"Chock the wheels that will stay on the ground - one chock in front, one behind. Loosen each lug nut about a quarter turn while the car is still on the ground. Trying to crack a stuck lug nut loose with the wheel in the air just spins the tire and stresses the jack.Slide the floor jack under the manufacturer's lift point (check the owner's manual - usually a reinforced pinch weld behind the front wheels or in front of the rear wheels). Lift one corner, set a jack stand under the frame or at a rated lift point, then lower the car onto the stand. A hydraulic floor jack is for lifting, not for holding - never crawl or work under a car held up only by a jack."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Swap the Tires According to Your Pattern","text":"With the car safely on jack stands, pull each wheel off and move it to its new position according to the pattern you chose in step 4. Roll the tires rather than carrying them - they weigh 30 to 60 pounds each and rolling saves your back.Hand-thread every lug nut a few turns before using a wrench to make sure none cross-thread. Snug them in a star pattern (top, bottom, side, opposite side, then the rest) so the wheel sits flat against the hub. Lower the car back onto its tires, then torque the lug nuts to the spec in your owner's manual - usually 80 to 100 ft-lb for passenger cars, 100 to 140 ft-lb for trucks. Always finish with a real torque wrench. Over-tightened lug nuts warp rotors and snap studs; under-tightened lug nuts kill people."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Flip the Tires on the Wheels Every Other Rotation","text":"This is the step almost every other tire-rotation video skips. After four rotations using a normal pattern, the outside edge of each tire has stayed on the outside of the wheel the whole time. On a front-wheel drive car, that outside edge is exactly where cornering forces wear the tire fastest. To even out the wear, every other rotation you need to dismount the tires from the wheels and flip them so the inside edge becomes the outside.You cannot do this in your driveway without a tire machine. Pull all four wheels off as normal, mark each tire with painter's tape so you remember which corner it came from, and take the wheels to a tire shop. They will mount each tire back on the wheel facing the opposite way for a few bucks per tire. Way less than buying a new set of tires 20,000 miles too early."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-23T14:47:34.826Z","published":"2026-05-23T14:47:10.750Z","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."}