The trip’s booked, the cooler’s packed, and the last thing you want three hours from home is steam pouring out from under the hood. Summer breakdowns are usually preventable - heat and long highway distances just expose whatever your car was already tolerating. Here’s what to check before you leave the driveway.
Check the Cooling System First
Overheating is the classic summer breakdown, and it’s almost always preventable with a five-minute check. Look at your coolant level when the engine is cold (never open a hot radiator cap - pressurized hot coolant can cause serious burns). Top up if low, and if your coolant hasn’t been flushed in a few years, or you’re not sure when it last was, get it checked before a long highway drive. A cooling system under strain in stop-and-go city traffic is one thing; the same weak system pulling a loaded car up a highway grade in 30°C heat for hours is a different level of stress entirely.
Inspect Tires Thoroughly
Tires do more work on a road trip than almost anything else in the car, and heat is genuinely hard on them:
- Check tread depth on all four tires, including the spare if you have one.
- Check tire pressure when tires are cold, ideally before you’ve driven that day - hot pavement and highway speed both raise pressure temporarily, so a reading taken after driving isn’t accurate.
- Look for uneven wear, bulges, or cracking in the sidewall, especially on tires that are a few years old. A bulge means internal damage and the tire could fail without warning at highway speed.
- Don’t forget the spare - many newer vehicles don’t carry one at all (a tire inflator kit or run-flats instead), so know what your car actually has before you’re stuck needing it.
A tire that fails at highway speed is one of the more dangerous roadside situations, so this is worth the extra few minutes.
Check Fluids Beyond Coolant
- Engine oil - level and, if it’s close to due, get it changed before a long trip rather than during it.
- Brake fluid - low levels can indicate a leak or worn brake pads.
- Power steering fluid, if your vehicle uses a hydraulic system.
- Washer fluid - bugs and road grime on a summer highway drive go through it fast.
Test the Battery, Even in Summer
Batteries fail in extreme heat too, not just extreme cold - heat accelerates the internal chemical degradation that eventually kills a battery, and a battery that’s already marginal can fail on a hot highway just as easily as on a cold morning. If yours is 3+ years old or has been slow to start recently, get it tested before a long trip. If it does die roadside, a mobile battery boost typically runs $45–$120.
Pack a Real Roadside Kit
A summer breakdown kit looks a little different from a winter one, but it still matters:
| Item | Why |
|---|---|
| Reflective triangles or flares | Visibility if you’re stopped on a shoulder |
| Basic tool kit and tire inflator/sealant | Minor fixes without waiting |
| Extra water (for you, not just the radiator) | Heat and a roadside wait don’t mix well |
| Phone charger/power bank | Dead phone battery makes everything worse |
| Paper map or offline maps downloaded | Cell coverage gaps happen, especially in rural stretches |
| Copy of registration/insurance | You’ll want it handy regardless of what goes wrong |
Know Your Roadside Coverage Before You Leave
Figure out what you’re actually covered for before you’re stuck 300 km from home needing it:
- CAA membership - tow distance limits and included services vary by tier (Basic/Plus/Premier); check your specific club’s terms, roughly $70–$180/yr depending on tier.
- Credit card roadside benefits - often bundled, but typically with shorter tow distances and limited calls per year; check your card’s certificate of insurance.
- Insurer roadside add-on - commonly $20–$60/yr, but ask whether roadside calls affect your claims history before relying on it.
- Manufacturer roadside assistance - many new vehicles include it during the basic warranty period, commonly 3–5 years; check your warranty booklet.
None of these are interchangeable, and distance limits especially matter on a road trip that might put you well outside your home region.
If You Break Down Anyway
Even a well-checked car can have a bad day on a long trip. Get the vehicle as far off the travel lane as safely possible, turn on hazards, and if you’re on a highway shoulder, stay in the vehicle with seatbelts on rather than standing near traffic - that’s when find a tow truck near you becomes the next step rather than trying to diagnose it yourself on the shoulder. Overheating specifically: pull over as soon as it’s safe, shut the engine off, and don’t open the radiator cap while it’s hot. Let it cool fully before checking coolant level, and don’t keep driving on an overheating engine - that’s how a fixable coolant leak turns into a blown head gasket.
A local tow commonly runs $100–$250 total, but long-distance tows away from home are priced differently - check the towing cost calculator for a general sense, and confirm the actual quote with the operator before they hook up.
The Week-Before Checklist
| Task | Timing |
|---|---|
| Coolant level and condition | 1 week before |
| Tire tread, pressure, sidewall check | 1 week before |
| Oil, brake fluid, washer fluid | 1 week before |
| Battery test if 3+ years old | 1–2 weeks before |
| Confirm roadside coverage and limits | Before booking the trip |
| Pack roadside kit | Day before |
| Re-check tire pressure cold | Morning of departure |
FAQ
What’s the most common cause of summer road trip breakdowns? Overheating and tire failures top the list - both are heavily influenced by pre-existing wear (old coolant, worn tires) that highway heat and sustained speed expose.
How do I check tire pressure correctly before a trip? Check when tires are cold, ideally before driving that day. Driving on hot pavement temporarily raises pressure readings, which can hide a genuinely low tire.
Can heat kill a car battery the way cold does? Yes - extreme heat accelerates internal battery degradation. A battery that’s already marginal can fail on a hot highway drive just as it might on a cold winter morning.
Do I need a spare tire for a road trip? Check what your car actually carries - many newer vehicles ship with a tire inflator kit or run-flat tires instead of a spare. Know which you have before you’re stuck on the shoulder needing it.
What roadside coverage should I check before a long trip? Confirm your CAA tier’s distance limits, your credit card’s roadside certificate terms, any insurer roadside add-on, and whether your vehicle still has manufacturer roadside assistance - distance limits especially matter if the trip takes you well outside your home region.
A little prep goes a long way on a summer trip, but if something still gives out on the highway, find a tow truck near you rather than push a compromised car further down the road.