The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
sharp-newt-568

Mismatched tires caused me to spin out on the highway — is this actually a thing?

So I learned something the hard way last week and I'm still processing it honestly.

I'd been putting off replacing my tires for a while — not proud of it — but I finally got one new tire put on the front a couple days before everything went sideways. The guy at the shop said I was fine to drive on it and I just kind of believed him without asking too many questions.

Fast forward two days later, I'm on the interstate during afternoon traffic, the car ahead of me brakes suddenly, I hit my brakes... and my car just rotates. Like, I'm suddenly facing a completely different direction than I was a half second ago. I didn't even fully understand what was happening until I'd already been clipped by the SUV coming up behind me.

Thankfully nobody needed an ambulance. My neck and shoulder are pretty sore but I drove myself home. The other driver was actually really calm about it and said he saw me spin before he could do anything.

My roommate looked it up later and was like — yeah, one tire with significantly more grip than the others can absolutely cause this, especially under hard braking. Something about uneven friction pulling the car in one direction?

Now I'm dealing with the insurance situation and I honestly don't even know whose fault this is considered. Mine because I braked? The shop because they should've told me to replace in pairs at minimum? Just... nobody's?

The car is probably done. I'm not even that upset about the car. I'm more shaken up that I genuinely didn't know this could happen and nobody warned me.

Has anyone dealt with a spin-out like this where the cause wasn't obvious weather or speeding? How did insurance handle fault?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 17
    silent-bison-953

    This happened to something similar to me — not tires, but I had uneven brake pads and spun on a wet road. Insurance tried to pin it entirely on me for 'losing control.' Took a lot of back and forth to get them to acknowledge the mechanical side of things. Document everything with that shop — the receipt, any paperwork, what they did or didn't tell you.

    • 7
      calm-driver216

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 20
    bright-fox-653

    Please don't brush off the neck and shoulder soreness just because you drove yourself home. Adrenaline masks a LOT in the first few hours after a crash. I've seen people come into urgent care two days later wondering why they suddenly can't turn their head. Get seen, get it documented — even if it turns out to be nothing. Your future self will thank you.

  • 18
    bold-elk-596

    Not legal advice, but the shop angle is genuinely worth exploring. If they installed a single tire without advising you on the risks of mismatched tread depth — especially on a drive axle — that could be a negligence conversation. Keep that receipt and don't sign anything with anyone until you've at least talked to a PI attorney for a free consult. Most won't charge just to hear the facts.

  • 6
    quick-vole-560

    Watch out — adjusters LOVE a spin-out situation because they can write it up as 'driver lost control' and close it fast. They're not going to volunteer the tire angle unless you bring it up and push. Don't let them rush you into a recorded statement before you've had time to think this through.

    • 6
      quiet-dreamer600

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 10
    warm-marten-429

    Honestly, from the inside, a single-tire replacement causing a spin is more common than people think and it does complicate fault determinations. The file will probably get flagged as 'contributing mechanical factor' but whether that helps or hurts you depends on how the claim is written up. If the shop has any record of what they recommended (or didn't), that matters. A lot.

    • 10
      hearty-elk-932

      I'm just glad you're okay. Spinning out in highway traffic is genuinely terrifying and the fact that you're coherent enough to write this out says a lot. Give yourself some grace — you didn't know, and now you do. Focus on your health first, everything else can get sorted.

    • 6
      tired-walker885

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 5
    warm-bison-100

    Three things: 1) Go get checked out medically TODAY, not next week. 2) Get a copy of the work order from that tire shop before they have any reason to alter it. 3) Don't give a recorded statement to any insurer — yours or theirs — without knowing what you're walking into. That's it. Do those three things first.

  • 22
    spry-owl-063

    Few questions because I think the details matter here: Was the new tire on the front or rear? Front/rear placement makes a big difference in how a car handles under braking. Also — did the shop do any kind of inspection when you brought it in, or was it just a straight swap? And were the other three tires actually worn or just older? I'm not doubting you, I just think the answer to fault here really hinges on those specifics.