Uneven tyre wear is usually a sign that something else needs checking. It may be wheel alignment, tyre pressure, worn suspension, steering play, heavy loads, towing use or damage from a pothole or rough-road impact.
Lloyd Street Tyre & Auto Service in Moe checks uneven tyre wear as part of a wider vehicle diagnosis. The tyre is often where the problem shows up, but the cause may sit in the steering, suspension, alignment or the way the vehicle is being loaded.
The main point is simple: replacing tyres without fixing the cause can waste the next set.
Uneven tyre wear patterns give useful clues, but they do not confirm the fault on their own. A mechanic still needs to inspect the tyre, wheel alignment, suspension and steering before calling the cause.
| Wear pattern | What it can point to | What to check next |
|---|---|---|
| Inside-edge wear | Camber issue, toe issue, lowered or sagging suspension, worn bushes or previous impact damage | Wheel alignment, suspension height, bushes, control arms and steering components |
| Outside-edge wear | Underinflation, cornering load, camber issue or worn suspension | Tyre pressure, alignment angles, shocks, springs and driving or load use. |
| Centre wear | Underinflation, heavy load, towing use or prolonged low pressure | Cold tyre pressure against the vehicle placard, tyre size and load rating |
| Both-edge wear | Rotor variation, pad deposits, heat damage, wheel balance, or suspension wear | Tyre pressure, load setup, towing setup and sidewall condition |
| Feathering | Toe misalignment, worn steering parts or suspension movement | Wheel alignment, tie rod ends, steering play and suspension bushes |
| Cupping or scalloping | Weak shocks, wheel imbalance, worn suspension or wheel bearing issues | Shock absorbers, wheel balance, wheel bearings and suspension joints |
| One tyre wearing faster than the others | Localised alignment fault, brake drag, suspension damage, wheel damage or rotation issue | Full vehicle inspection, brake check, alignment and tyre rotation history |
A simple tread-depth check tells you how much tyre is left. A wear-pattern check tells you why the tyre may be disappearing early.
Wheel alignment can cause uneven tyre wear when the wheels are not sitting at the correct angles. The car may still drive straight, even while the tyres are wearing badly.
The main alignment angles are:
Toe problems often create feathering or fast tread wear. Camber problems often show as inside-edge or outside-edge wear. Caster problems may show more as pulling, wandering or poor steering return.
Alignment should be checked after:
A wheel alignment is not just about making the steering wheel straight. It is about restoring the tyre contact patch so the vehicle sits, steers and wears tyres correctly.
Suspension wear can cause tyre wear because the tyre is no longer being held steady against the road. Worn shocks, bushes, ball joints, springs or control arms can let the wheel move in ways it should not.
That movement can show up as:
A worn shock absorber is a common example. The tyre may bounce slightly instead of staying planted on the road. Over time, that can create patchy wear around the tyre.
A worn bush or ball joint can also change alignment while the car is moving. The numbers may look different under load than they do when the vehicle is sitting still.
That is why a proper tyre wear check should not stop at the tread. The suspension needs to be checked too.
Tyre pressure can cause uneven wear when the tyre is not sitting flat on the road. Overinflation usually wears the centre of the tread faster. Underinflation usually wears both shoulders faster.
Pressure should be checked when the tyres are cold and compared with the vehicle placard or owner's manual. The right pressure depends on the vehicle, tyre size, load and use.
Common pressure-related patterns include:
Do not guess pressures by looking at the tyre. Modern tyres can look acceptable while still being underinflated.
Work utes, 4WDs and towing vehicles can wear tyres differently because they often carry more weight and place more load through the suspension. A ute with tools, drawers, canopy, fridge, trailer or caravan may sit very differently to the same vehicle when empty.
This matters because load can change:
A work ute that carries load every day may wear tyres differently to a family SUV doing school runs and highway trips. A 4WD used on gravel roads or rough access tracks may also show more suspension and alignment movement than a car that stays on smooth sealed roads.
Towing adds another layer. Towball weight can push the rear of the vehicle down and lift weight off the front. If the setup is not right, that can affect steering, braking, tyre wear and general stability.
Uneven tyre wear on a loaded vehicle should be treated as a setup clue, not just a tyre problem.
The safest answer depends on how worn the tyres are. If the tyres are already unsafe or below the legal tread requirement, they need replacing. But the cause of the uneven wear still needs checking, or the next tyres may wear the same way.
In Victoria, road tyres must have at least 1.5 mm of tread depth in the principal grooves, except at the tread wear indicators. Excessive uneven wear should not be ignored just because one part of the tread still looks acceptable.
| Situation | Replace tyres now? | Check first |
|---|---|---|
| Tyres are below safe tread | Yes | Alignment, suspension and tyre pressure should still be checked. |
| Wear is minor but uneven | Not always | Find the cause before it becomes expensive. |
| Wear returned after new tyres | Possibly, depending on tread | Alignment, suspension, steering and load setup. |
| Steering wheel is off-centre | Not always | Wheel alignment and steering components. |
| Vehicle pulls or wanders | Not always | Tyre pressure, alignment, brakes, steering and suspension. |
| Tyres are cupping or scalloped | Possibly, depending on severity | Shocks, wheel balance, suspension and wheel bearings. |
If the tyres are nearly new and already wearing unevenly, that is the time to act. Waiting until the tread is gone makes the repair more expensive and gives the workshop less useful evidence.
An uneven tyre wear inspection should look at the tyre and the vehicle together. The aim is to find the cause, not just point to the worn tread.
A useful check may include:
This is also where tyre rotation history matters. A tyre that has moved from front to rear can carry an old wear pattern with it, which can make the diagnosis less obvious.
The more specific you are, the easier the diagnosis becomes. Tell the workshop where the tyre is wearing and what the vehicle is used for.
Use this wording when you book:
"My tyres are wearing on the inside/outside/centre/patches, and the vehicle is used for commuting/work/towing/gravel roads. Can you check what is causing the wear before I put another set of tyres on?"
Also mention:
Those details can save time and reduce guesswork.
No. Wheel alignment is a common cause of uneven tyre wear, but it is not the only one. Tyre pressure, worn suspension, steering wear, wheel imbalance, brake drag, wheel bearing issues, load and towing setup can also be involved.
Alignment should usually be checked, but the result needs to be read alongside the vehicle's condition and use.
Tyres wearing on the inside edge may point to camber, toe, sagging suspension, worn bushes or impact damage. It can also happen after suspension changes if alignment is not corrected properly.
Inside-edge wear should be checked before the tyre reaches an unsafe level. From the outside of the car, the tyre may look better than it is.
Yes. Worn shock absorbers can cause cupping, scalloping or patchy tread wear because the tyre is not being controlled properly over bumps.
Bad shocks can also affect braking, steering feel and grip in wet conditions. If the tread looks uneven in patches, the shocks and wider suspension should be inspected.
If the old tyres are badly worn, the alignment may be done when the new tyres are fitted. But if the current tyres still have useful tread and the wear has only started, checking alignment early may save them.
The important part is not to fit new tyres and ignore the cause. New tyres can hide the evidence for a short time, but the wear pattern may come back.
Uneven tyre wear is one of the clearest signs a vehicle is trying to tell you something. Sometimes it is simple tyre pressure. Sometimes it is alignment. Sometimes it is suspension, steering, load or towing setup.
Lloyd Street Tyre & Auto Service can inspect the wear pattern, check the mechanical causes and advise whether the vehicle needs tyre pressure correction, wheel alignment, steering and suspension repairs, tyre replacement or a closer diagnostic check.
If one tyre is wearing faster than the others, the tread pattern is the place to start. It should not be the place where the diagnos