Wheel alignment guide

What is wheel alignment?

Wheel alignment is the adjustment of the angles at which tyres contact the road surface. Three key angles are set: toe (inward/outward pointing), camber (tilt from vertical) and caster (steering axis tilt). Correct alignment ensures even tyre wear, straight-line tracking and safe handling. Misalignment is most commonly caused by hitting potholes, kerbs or other impacts. Check alignment annually or after any significant impact.

FAQ

What is wheel alignment?
Wheel alignment is the adjustment of the angles at which tyres contact the road surface. Three key angles are set: toe (inward/outward pointing), camber (tilt from vertical) and caster (steering axis tilt). Correct alignment ensures even tyre wear, straight-line tracking and safe handling. Misalignment is most commonly caused by hitting potholes, kerbs or other impacts. Check alignment annually or after any significant impact.
What should I verify before using this information?
Use TireFitLab values as a sizing reference, then verify the vehicle handbook, tire placard, rim compatibility, load rating, and physical clearance before fitting.

How-to steps

  1. Check symptoms first Look for pulling, off-centre steering, feathering, one-sided wear, or recent impact damage before booking alignment.
  2. Measure toe, camber, and caster Use an alignment rack to compare each angle with the vehicle specification and correct adjustable angles in the proper order.
  3. Verify after adjustment Centre the steering wheel, road-test the vehicle, and recheck tire pressures and uneven-wear causes.

The three alignment angles

Angle Axis Positive Negative Effect if out of spec
Toe Horizontal (viewed from above) Toe-in — fronts of tyres angled inward Toe-out — fronts of tyres angled outward Incorrect toe causes the fastest tyre wear; feathering or sawtooth pattern on tread edges. Affects straight-line stability.
Camber Vertical (viewed from front/rear) Positive camber — top of tyre tilts outward Negative camber — top of tyre tilts inward Excessive camber wears the inner or outer shoulder. Slight negative camber (+0 to −1.5°) improves cornering grip.
Caster Longitudinal axis tilt (viewed from side) Positive caster — steering axis tilted rearward at top Negative caster — steering axis tilted forward at top Caster affects steering feel and straight-line stability. Most cars run positive caster (3–7°). Rarely adjustable on modern cars.

Symptoms of misalignment

Symptom Likely cause
Vehicle pulls left or right on a flat straight road Unequal toe or camber side-to-side
Steering wheel off-centre when driving straight Rear toe or thrust angle out of spec
Rapid wear on inner or outer tyre edge Camber out of spec (positive = outer, negative = inner)
Feathered / sawtooth tread pattern Toe misalignment
Unstable at motorway speeds / wandering Caster imbalance or excessive toe-out
Vibration through steering wheel Out-of-balance wheel (not alignment) — check balancing first

Alignment vs balancing — what's the difference?

How often to align

2-wheel vs 4-wheel alignment

A 2-wheel (front) alignment sets only the front axle angles. Adequate for most simple front-wheel-drive vehicles with a solid rear axle.

A 4-wheel alignment measures and adjusts all four corners and the thrust angle (the direction the rear axle points). Required for AWD, independent rear suspension cars, and any vehicle that drifts or shows rear tyre wear. 4-wheel alignment is best practice for all modern cars.

More tools

Last reviewed: 2026-06-21

Seasonal check

Planning a long summer drive?

Use the budget and running-cost tools before a trip, especially if the current tyres are worn or the replacement size changes diameter.

Estimate tyre budget
Last reviewed: 2026-06-28
What changed
  • Reviewed deterministic geometry, load/speed references, sitemap inclusion and localized page shell.