What Causes a Car to Pull to One Side?
Alignment, uneven tire pressure, worn suspension, or a sticking brake can make your car pull. Learn how we diagnose and fix it.
Updated July 15, 2026
What Causes a Car to Pull to One Side?
You noticed something that felt off. Here’s what it likely means, when it matters, and when you can safely wait. At our New Britain shop, we get this question from drivers across central Connecticut — from folks in Newington driving down the East Street corridor to Farmington commuters coming off I-84. The honest answer isn’t always the answer the internet gives you.
If you’d rather just have us take a look, our Steering & Suspension team handles this every day. But it’s worth understanding the basics first.

The Practical Answer
- Alignment out of spec
- Uneven tire pressure or wear
- Worn suspension components
Every one of these matters for a different reason. Let’s walk through the ones that trip most drivers up.
Why This Matters for New Britain Drivers
Connecticut roads see it all — pothole-heavy spring, road-salt winter, hot humid summer, and everything in between. That environment shapes when a repair or service actually pays off versus when it can safely wait. We factor local conditions into every recommendation we make at the shop.
What to Watch For
- Sticking brake caliper
- Diagnosis path and bridge to hub
Getting these details right saves money down the road. Skipping them almost always costs more later.
MAP-Standard Honest Recommendations
At our shop we follow Motorist Assurance Program (MAP) standards. That means we only recommend the work that your vehicle actually needs — not what pads our invoice. If a component is within spec, we tell you it’s within spec. If it’s borderline, we explain the trade-off honestly and let you decide.
Thirty-plus years serving New Britain has taught us that trust is built one honest inspection at a time. That’s why our neighbors keep coming back.
Ready for a Look?
Every service we do includes a free multi-point Performance Review, so we can flag anything else that needs attention before it becomes a bigger problem. Our Steering & Suspension page has the full details, and you can book an appointment online or call 860-305-5234.