Automotive Inspection
Brake & Suspension Inspection
Worn brakes and failing suspension don’t announce themselves โ until it’s too late. Our certified technicians inspect every safety-critical component before a close call becomes an accident.
New to NorTech? Save 15% off your first service โ brake & suspension inspection, brake pad replacement, or any automotive safety service.
Use code
NORTECH15
at checkout.
This Is a Safety Inspection โ Not a Routine Checkup
Brakes and suspension are the two systems most directly responsible for vehicle control. A failing brake pad or blown strut can mean the difference between stopping in time and not stopping at all. If you’re hearing grinding, feeling vibration, or noticing pulling to one side โ don’t wait. Book immediately.
Inspection Only โ No Pressure, No Upselling
Our technicians are paid to inspect, not to sell repairs. Every finding goes into your report with honest severity ratings and repair cost estimates. Any follow-up work is entirely your call, quoted and scheduled separately. That independence is what makes our findings trustworthy.
What’s Covered
Three Critical Systems. One Complete Inspection.
Brakes, suspension, and wheel components work together to keep your vehicle controlled and stable. We inspect all three in a single visit โ nothing gets overlooked.
Brake System Evaluation
Your stopping power depends entirely on the condition of these components. We measure, test, and document everything.
- Measure brake pad thickness on all four wheels
- Inspect rotors for scoring, warping, or minimum thickness
- Check calipers for sticking, leaking, or uneven wear
- Test brake fluid level and moisture content
- Inspect brake lines for corrosion, leaks, or damage
- Evaluate brake pedal feel and pedal travel distance
Suspension & Steering Assessment
Suspension keeps your tires in contact with the road. Worn components affect handling, comfort, and tire life simultaneously.
- Inspect shocks and struts for leaking or worn mounts
- Check coil springs for cracks, settling, or breakage
- Examine ball joints and control arms for play or damage
- Test sway bar links and bushings for wear
- Evaluate power steering response and rack condition
- Check for uneven tire wear indicating alignment issues
Wheel & Axle Performance Check
Wheel bearings, CV joints, and axle components affect both safety and handling โ and often fail gradually before becoming dangerous.
- Spin and listen to wheel bearings for roughness or noise
- Inspect CV joints and axle boots for cracks or grease leaks
- Check hub assemblies for looseness or damage
- Verify tire pressure and condition on all four corners
- Note alignment indicators from tire wear patterns
- Photograph any components requiring attention
Visual Reference Guide
Healthy vs. Worn โ What Each Component Should Look Like
Most brake and suspension wear is gradual and invisible to the untrained eye. This is what your technician looks for at every inspection.
Brake Pads
โ Good
โ Worn
6mm+ of friction material, smooth surface, no cracking
Under 3mm, metal wear indicator visible or audible grinding
Brake Rotors
โ Good
โ Worn
Smooth surface, above minimum thickness, no deep grooves
Deep scoring, warping, rust lip, or below minimum spec
Shocks & Struts
โ Good
โ Worn
Dry body, firm damping, no bounce after compression test
Oil leak on body, excessive bounce, worn upper mounts
Ball Joints
โ Good
โ Worn
No measurable play, intact grease boot, smooth movement
Detectable looseness, torn boot, dry or corroded joint
CV Joint Boots
โ Good
โ Worn
Intact rubber boot, grease visible but contained, no clicking
Cracked or torn boot, grease thrown onto wheel, clicking turns
Wheel Bearings
โ Good
โ Worn
Silent rotation, no play when wheel is rocked at 6 & 12 o’clock
Humming or grinding sound, measurable wheel play or wobble
Don’t Ignore These
Symptoms That Mean Book Now, Not Later
Unlike most car problems, brake and suspension issues can escalate from annoying to dangerous in a matter of days. These signs mean don’t wait.
Grinding or Squealing Brakes
Squealing is your wear indicator warning you. Grinding means metal-on-metal contact โ you’re damaging rotors every time you stop.
Vehicle Pulling to One Side
Pulling while braking suggests a stuck caliper or uneven pad wear. Pulling during normal driving often points to alignment or suspension issues.
Vibration Through the Wheel or Pedal
Pedal pulsation during braking typically means warped rotors. Steering wheel vibration at speed often indicates worn wheel bearings or bad alignment.
Bouncy or Unstable Ride
If your car continues to bounce after bumps or feels loose in corners, your shocks or struts are no longer damping movement effectively.
Clunking or Knocking Noises
A clunk over bumps often means a worn ball joint, loose sway bar link, or failing strut mount โ components that can cause sudden loss of control.
Spongy or Low Brake Pedal
A pedal that sinks toward the floor or feels soft indicates air in the brake lines, a fluid leak, or a failing master cylinder โ a serious safety issue.
The Process
What to Expect During Your Inspection
Your Brake & Suspension Inspection is thorough and systematic. Most visits take 45โ60 minutes. Here’s exactly what your technician does.
Symptom Review
Your technician starts by asking about any noises, pulling, vibration, or handling changes you’ve noticed โ context that guides where to look first.
Visual & Physical Inspection
All brake components, suspension links, and wheel assemblies are visually checked and physically tested for play, leaks, wear, and structural integrity.
Measurement & Documentation
Pad thickness, rotor thickness, and suspension play are measured with tools โ not eyeballed. Problem areas are photographed for your report.
Report Delivered in 24 Hours
You receive a full digital report: component-by-component findings, severity ratings, photos, safety notes, and estimated repair costs โ stored in your portal.
Component Life Expectancy
How Long Do Brake & Suspension Parts Last?
These are general ranges โ actual wear depends heavily on driving style, road conditions, and vehicle type. Your technician will measure and give you specifics.
| Component | Typical Lifespan | Key Warning Sign | Risk if Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brake Pads | 25,000โ70,000 miles | Squealing, grinding, reduced stopping | Rotor damage, brake failure |
| Brake Rotors | 50,000โ70,000 miles | Pulsation, scoring, vibration | Loss of braking performance |
| Brake Fluid | Every 2 years or 25,000 mi | Spongy pedal, dark fluid color | Vapor lock, pedal failure |
| Shocks & Struts | 50,000โ100,000 miles | Bouncing, nose-dive, rough ride | Poor handling, tire wear |
| Ball Joints | 70,000โ150,000 miles | Clunking, wandering steering | Sudden wheel separation risk |
| CV Joints | 80,000โ150,000 miles | Clicking during turns, vibration | Axle failure, immobility |
| Wheel Bearings | 85,000โ100,000 miles | Humming noise, wheel play | Wheel detachment risk |
What Does a Brake & Suspension Inspection Cost?
Pricing varies by vehicle type and scope. Here’s a general range โ get your exact quote in minutes with no obligation.
Before Your Visit
How to Prepare for Your Inspection
Help your technician work safely and efficiently with these steps before the appointment.
Prep Checklist
- Park on a flat, level surface with tires pointed straight ahead
- Make sure wheel wells are accessible โ clear away any mud or debris if possible
- Note exactly when symptoms occur โ braking only, turning, at speed, over bumps, etc.
- Mention any recent work done โ new tires, recent pad change, alignment โ it’s all context
- Don’t drive aggressively beforehand โ let brakes cool so the tech gets an accurate pedal feel assessment
Related Services
Other Automotive Inspections & Safety Services
Keep your vehicle fully covered with these related NorTech services.
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about your Brake & Suspension Inspection before you book.
Most Brake & Suspension Inspections take 45โ60 minutes depending on vehicle type, accessibility, and whether specific components require detailed measurement or photography.
No โ this is a diagnostic inspection only. If worn pads, damaged rotors, or failing suspension components are found, they’re documented in your report with severity ratings and cost estimates. Repairs are quoted and scheduled separately with zero pressure.
We recommend every 12 months or every 12,000 miles as a baseline. If you drive in stop-and-go traffic, tow frequently, or live in an area with rough roads, every 6 months is better. Always book immediately if you notice any warning symptoms.
Yes. Brake pad wear is gradual โ most drivers can’t feel the difference between 6mm and 3mm of pad life. Suspension wear is even more subtle; components often degrade slowly enough that you adapt to the change without noticing. An inspection catches what you can’t feel.
Your report includes findings for every inspected component, measured values where applicable (pad thickness, rotor thickness), severity ratings (Good / Monitor / Service Soon / Urgent), photos of problem areas, and estimated repair costs โ all accessible in your customer portal.
Urgent findings are flagged clearly in your report and your technician will inform you on-site. NorTech can schedule same-day or next-day repair services for critical safety issues. You’re never obligated, but we’ll always be direct about what’s safe to drive on and what isn’t.
Yes โ same-day availability in 100+ cities. If you’re experiencing active brake symptoms, flag it when booking and we’ll prioritize your appointment.
