How To Rotate Tires?

Park on a level surface and set the parking brake

Loosen (do not remove) the lug nuts on each tire

Lift the vehicle with a jack at the manufacturer-approved lift points

Support the vehicle with jack stands if needed; keep the tires off the ground securely

Remove lug nuts and take off the first wheel

Install the tire in the desired new position by aligning the wheel with the hub

Hand-thread lug nuts until snug

Lower the vehicle slightly so the tire contacts the ground (if using jack stands)

Tighten lug nuts in a star pattern to the vehicle’s specified torque

Repeat for each wheel

Verify all lug nuts are torqued correctly after the final wheel

Check tire pressures and adjust to the recommended PSI

If applicable, reset the TPMS using the vehicle’s procedure or tool

Test drive briefly and recheck lug nut torque after 25–50 miles (or per your manual)

Use the correct rotation pattern:

Front-wheel drive (typical): front tires move to rear on the same side; rear tires move to front opposite side

Rear-wheel drive (typical): rear tires move to front on the same side; front tires move to rear opposite side

All-wheel drive (typical): follow the owner’s manual; if staggered sizes or different wheel/tire specs are used, rotate only front-to-rear on the same side when allowed

Directional tires: keep left tires on the left and right tires on the right; rotate only front-to-rear on the same side

Staggered sizes (different front/rear widths): rotate only front-to-rear on the same side if permitted by the manufacturer

Stop if tires are mismatched in size, type, or direction unless the manual allows the movement you plan

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