Tire Inspection
Steer Tire Inspection Checklist
Steer tires are inspected by the same principles as any truck tire, but the position raises the stakes. A damaged or worn steer tire affects steering control. The inspection is not longer than for other positions, but the removal thresholds are stricter and the escalation should be faster.
The federal tread depth minimum for steer tires is 4/32 inch — twice the 2/32 inch required at other positions. Many fleets set a higher pull point to keep a margin and preserve casing value.
Steer tire inspection sequence
| Item | Check method | Threshold or flag |
|---|---|---|
| Tread depth — center | Gauge in major center groove | Below 4/32 inch: remove (federal minimum for steer); flag at 5/32 inch or fleet threshold |
| Tread depth — both shoulders | Gauge at inner and outer shoulder rib | Shoulder below 4/32 inch: remove; note if one shoulder is lower than the other — alignment signal |
| Sidewall condition | Look and feel both sides of each steer tire | Any bulge, cut exposing cords, or cracking with opening: flag for professional review |
| Tread surface | Look for feathering, diagonal wear, cupping, or rapid irregular patterns | Any irregular pattern: note position and report to maintenance |
| Valve stem and cap | Check cap is present; check stem for damage or corrosion | Missing caps: replace before dispatch; damaged stems: shop review |
| Inflation — cold check | Gauge before the vehicle moves | Compare to fleet target for steer position based on steer axle load |
| Rim and mounting area | Look for cracking at lug holes, bead area damage | Visible cracks or rust seepage at the rim: remove for inspection |
Steer-specific concern: irregular wear patterns
Any irregular wear on a steer tire — one-sided, feathering, cupping, or diagonal — is worth documenting and reporting even if tread depth is still acceptable. Irregular patterns on steer tires often progress faster than on other positions because of the steering forces involved. A pattern that might allow one more tire set before alignment service on a drive position should go to alignment service promptly when found on the steer axle.
Position restrictions on steer tires
- Some steer tires carry manufacturer position restrictions that limit or prohibit drive or trailer use.
- Verify the position restriction marked on the tire before moving a worn steer tire to a non-steer position.
- Do not mount on a steer axle any tire that was returned from drive or trailer service unless it is specifically approved for steer use.
- Retreads may have additional position restrictions from the retreader — confirm before steer use.
Step-by-Step Checklist
- Check tread depth at center and both shoulders — record each.
- Inspect both sidewalls visually and by hand.
- Verify inflation against the fleet steer-position target.
- Document any irregular wear pattern with the position and pattern type.
- Check valve stems and caps on both steer tires.
FAQ
What is the federal tread depth minimum for steer tires?
Under 49 CFR 393.75, the minimum tread depth for tires on the front (steer) axle of a commercial motor vehicle is 4/32 inch, measured in a major tread groove. This is double the 2/32 inch minimum that applies to other positions. The higher minimum reflects the steer position's role in vehicle control. A steer tire at 4/32 inch meets the legal floor but has very little wet-weather traction margin. Most fleet policies pull steer tires at 5/32 or 6/32 inch.
How often should steer tires be inspected?
A basic visual check should occur before every trip as part of the pre-trip inspection. A gauge-based tread depth and pressure check should occur at each scheduled maintenance interval and any time a driver reports steering-related symptoms (pulling, vibration, shimmy). After any road hazard impact — pothole, curb strike, debris — the steer tires should be inspected more thoroughly before the next dispatch, even if nothing appears wrong visually.
Can retreads be used on the steer axle?
Federal regulations do not universally prohibit retreads on all steer positions, but restrictions vary by vehicle class, and many fleets and manufacturers maintain stricter policies. The steer axle is considered the most safety-sensitive position. Before using a retread on a steer axle, verify the current applicable federal and state rules, the retreader's position approval, your carrier's written policy, and any customer or contract restrictions. When in doubt, use a new tire in the steer position.
Source Notes
- Government 49 CFR 393.75 - Tires
- Government 49 CFR Part 396 - Inspection, Repair, and Maintenance
- Government FMCSA Motor Carrier Safety Planner: Tires (393.75)
- Site note TruckTireGuide.com editorial notes