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Tyre services in the UAE: the rules, the risks, and how to know your fitter is legitimate

In the UAE a tyre is a regulated product with a legal expiry date, a mandatory heat standard and a starring role in insurance disputes. Yet most drivers buy on price alone and never look at the four digits stamped on the sidewall. This guide reads the whole subject through a compliance lens: what the law actually requires, where corners get cut, and how to check that the person fitting your tyres is licensed, insured and selling you fresh stock.

in this guide

The five-year rule: how a tyre with full tread still fails inspectionWhat makes a tyre legal here: GSO standards, MOIAT conformity and heat ratingsThe part-worn problem: where corners actually get cutHow to verify a fitter is legitimate: licences, premises and paper trailInsurance and liability: the fine print that turns on your tyresRun-flats and TPMS: the premium-car compliance trapsNitrogen versus air: modest physics, oversold promisesSpeed bumps, kerbs and alignment: the geometry tax of UAE roadsInspection day: what the testing lane actually checkswhat it costsMobile tyre fitting at your building: how a compliant visit runsemirate by emirateBefore you book, and before the van leavesmistakes to avoidfrequently asked questions

The five-year rule: how a tyre with full tread still fails inspection

Every tyre carries a DOT code moulded into the sidewall, and the last four digits are the part that matters here: two digits for the production week, two for the year. 3523 means week 35 of 2023. UAE practice, built on the Gulf standard for tyres, treats five years from that production date as the end of a tyre's legal life on the road, regardless of how much tread is left. The logic is chemical rather than mechanical: rubber compounds oxidise and harden with age, and the process runs far faster in a climate where asphalt surface temperatures pass 70 degrees in summer. An aged tyre can look showroom-fresh and still delaminate at highway speed.

This is not a theoretical guideline. Vehicle testing centres check DOT dates during the annual registration inspection, and a tyre past the five-year mark is a straightforward fail. Drivers routinely discover this the expensive way: they arrive for renewal with tyres they bought only three years ago, and fail anyway, because the tyres had already sat in a warehouse for two years before fitting. That is why the date check belongs at the point of purchase, not the inspection lane. A reputable fitter will show you the DOT stamp on each tyre before it goes on the rim; if the stock being offered as new is already a year or more old, ask for fresher production or walk away.

There is also a traffic-law layer on top of the registration layer. Driving on worn or deteriorated tyres carries a fine of AED 500 and four black points under the federal traffic rules, and police can impound the vehicle. Tread depth below 1.6 millimetres, visible cords, sidewall cracking or bulges all qualify. In practice, summer blowout campaigns run by police in several emirates make this one of the more actively enforced vehicle-condition offences on UAE roads.

Tyres sold in the UAE must conform to Gulf standards administered through the federal conformity system, now under the Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology, which absorbed the old standards authority ESMA. Compliant tyres carry Gulf conformity marking alongside the usual sidewall data, confirming the model has been tested for the region. The tests matter because the Gulf is close to the worst operating environment a passenger tyre faces anywhere: sustained high ambient heat, long full-speed highway runs, and heavy vehicles with cold air-conditioning loads. A tyre engineered and certified for northern European conditions is not automatically suitable, even if the size matches.

The practical shorthand on the sidewall is the UTQG temperature grade, printed as A, B or C. Grade A indicates the best resistance to heat build-up at sustained speed, and it is the sensible minimum for a car that regularly runs the E11 or E311 in August. Speed rating matters for the same reason: heat generation rises with speed, and UAE highways combine 120-plus km/h limits with the buffer many drivers use. Fitting a lower speed rating than the manufacturer specifies is a compliance problem twice over, once at inspection and once with your insurer.

Grey-market imports are the trap. Tyres brought in through informal channels can be genuine brands in non-GCC spec, or worse, production intended for cooler markets and dumped here at attractive prices. The paperwork test is simple: a legitimate seller can tell you the tyre is GCC-spec and show conformity documentation on request, and the price will sit inside the normal market band rather than dramatically under it. When comparing vendors on the tamam app, treat a quote far below every other verified vendor for the same size and brand as a flag to investigate, not a bargain to grab.

The part-worn problem: where corners actually get cut

The used-tyre trade is where most of the genuine danger in this market lives. Part-worn tyres are sold cheaply from the back rows of industrial-area shops, often imported in bulk from markets where they were already retired. The problems stack: unknown history, possible internal damage from a previous impact, age often at or past the five-year threshold, and storage in shipping containers that bake in the sun for months. A tyre that spent a summer in an unventilated container has aged years in chemical terms. Municipal authorities have run repeated campaigns against non-compliant tyre stock, and this segment is the reason.

The corner-cutting is not always so blatant. It also looks like a shop fitting your tyre without checking the inside of the casing after a puncture, plugging a sidewall injury that legally and technically requires the tyre to be scrapped, or reusing a rusted valve stem to save five minutes. String plugs pushed in from the outside without demounting the tyre are a roadside expedient, acceptable to reach a workshop, not a permanent repair. A proper repair means demounting, inspecting the inner liner, and fitting a combination patch-plug from the inside, with the tyre rebalanced afterwards.

Your defence is process, not suspicion of everyone. Insist on seeing the removed tyre and the damage before agreeing to a repair-versus-replace decision. Ask whether the repair is a patch-plug from the inside. And when a puncture sits in the shoulder or sidewall, accept the replacement verdict: no honest fitter will warranty a repair there, and any insurer investigating a later blowout will find it.

How to verify a fitter is legitimate: licences, premises and paper trail

Tyre fitting is licensed trade activity in every emirate. A fixed workshop holds a trade licence from the local economic department covering tyre repair and sales, plus civil-defence compliance for the premises, since a building full of stacked rubber is a serious fire load. A mobile fitting operation is typically the outreach arm of a licensed workshop, running vans under the same commercial licence. The verification questions are short: what is the licence name and number, which emirate issued it, and does the invoice you receive carry that trading name with a TRN for VAT. A provider who cannot produce an invoice with a tax registration number is operating informally, and you have no recourse when something goes wrong.

Documentation matters most in the failure case. If a wheel comes loose because lug nuts were not torqued, or a fresh tyre fails and causes damage, your route to compensation runs through the provider's commercial identity and their liability insurance. Licensed garages carry insurance precisely because wheel and tyre work is safety-critical; an unlicensed operator with a borrowed compressor carries nothing. This is one of the quiet advantages of booking through a platform that vets its vendors: tamam lists verified providers with transparent AED price ranges, and the booking, payment and job record all live in the app, which means there is always a documented trail of who did what to your car and when.

A last practical check is behavioural rather than bureaucratic. A competent fitter uses a torque wrench for final tightening rather than hammering the impact gun to maximum, resets or checks the TPMS after the job, sets pressures to the placard on your door jamb rather than a generic number, and tells you unprompted to re-check torque after the first 50 to 100 kilometres. Any one of those habits is a good sign; all four together mean you have found your regular, and same-vendor rebooking exists for exactly that moment.

Insurance and liability: the fine print that turns on your tyres

UAE motor insurance policies require the vehicle to be roadworthy, and tyres are the component insurers examine first after a serious single-vehicle accident. A claim following a highway blowout can be reduced or rejected if the tyres are found to have been beyond the five-year age limit, worn below the legal tread depth, or visibly damaged before the incident. The surveyor's report will record DOT dates as a matter of routine. In other words, running old tyres does not just risk the AED 500 fine; it can put the entire value of an accident claim in question, along with liability for damage to others.

Modification is the second trap. Changing wheel and tyre sizes away from the manufacturer's approved fitments, fitting different sizes front to rear where the maker does not specify it, or deleting run-flats on a car designed around them are all changes an insurer can treat as undeclared modifications. None of this means you can never change anything; it means changes should stay within the approved fitment list in your handbook, and anything beyond it should be declared to the insurer in writing before renewal rather than discovered by a surveyor afterwards.

Liability also runs the other direction, toward the fitter. If a wheel detaches or a repaired tyre fails and the cause is workmanship, the workshop's insurance responds, but only if you can prove who did the work. Keep the invoice, keep the booking record, and photograph the DOT dates of newly fitted tyres. It takes ninety seconds and it converts a hopeless argument into a documented claim. The same records help in the ordinary case too: manufacturer warranties on tyres cover defects, not damage, and the distinction is argued with paperwork, so a dated invoice showing where and when the tyre was fitted is the difference between a goodwill replacement and a shrug.

Run-flats and TPMS: the premium-car compliance traps

A large share of German premium cars in the UAE arrive on run-flat tyres and carry no spare wheel, no jack, and sometimes no space where a spare would go. Run-flats have reinforced sidewalls that support the car for a limited distance at reduced speed after a full pressure loss, which is why the maker felt safe deleting the spare. Replacing them with conventional tyres purely to save money changes the safety design of the car: a puncture that was a controlled drive to a workshop becomes a roadside stop on a hard shoulder with no spare. If you make that change, do it knowingly, carry a quality repair kit or arrange roadside cover, and tell your insurer.

Run-flats also have stricter repair rules. Most manufacturers advise against repairing a run-flat that has been driven flat at all, because the reinforced sidewall can be damaged internally in ways no visual inspection catches. A fitter who cheerfully plugs a run-flat that limped twenty kilometres home is cutting a corner you will not see until it matters. Expect the honest answer to be replacement more often than repair, and expect run-flat sets to price at the top of the market range.

Tyre pressure monitoring is the other detail that separates careful work from quick work. Direct TPMS sensors live inside the wheel, cost real money, and are easily destroyed by careless demounting. After any tyre change the system needs sensors intact, service kits (valve cores and seals) renewed, and a relearn or reset so the car reads the correct corners. A dashboard TPMS warning that appears the day after a tyre change is not a coincidence, and a fitter who says to just ignore the light has told you everything about their standards.

Nitrogen versus air: modest physics, oversold promises

Nitrogen inflation has real but small advantages. Nitrogen molecules permeate rubber more slowly than oxygen, so a nitrogen-filled tyre loses pressure somewhat more slowly over the weeks, and the dry gas carries no water vapour, which means slightly more stable pressures as temperatures swing and less internal corrosion of steel belts and TPMS valve hardware. In a country where the gap between a January dawn and an August afternoon can be 35 degrees, more stable pressure is a genuine, if modest, benefit. Airlines and racing teams use nitrogen for these reasons at extremes far beyond road driving.

What nitrogen is not is a substitute for checking pressures. Underinflation remains the single biggest cause of highway blowouts in the Gulf: a soft tyre flexes more, flexing generates heat, and heat is what kills tyres here. That mechanism operates identically whatever gas is inside. The compliance-minded routine is a monthly pressure check against the door-jamb placard, done cold, plus a visual walk-around for bulges and embedded objects before any long highway run. If a vendor offers nitrogen as an inexpensive add-on at fitting time, it is reasonable value; if it is being sold as a safety system that replaces maintenance, it is being oversold.

One caution: mixed fills are harmless but pointless. Topping up a nitrogen fill with ordinary air at a petrol station does no damage whatsoever, and the widespread belief that it does keeps drivers running underinflated while they hunt for a nitrogen point. Correct pressure with plain air always beats low pressure while waiting for the right gas.

Speed bumps, kerbs and alignment: the geometry tax of UAE roads

UAE communities are dense with traffic-calming: speed humps at every school gate, raised tables through villa compounds, and generously proportioned roundabout kerbs. Taken briskly, each hit transfers a shock through the tyre into the suspension geometry, and the cumulative effect is alignment drift. The signs are quiet at first: a steering wheel that sits slightly off-centre on a straight road, a car that drifts to one side on a level highway, and then the expensive symptom, a saw-toothed or feathered wear pattern chewing the inside or outside edge of a tyre months before the rest of the tread is done.

The compliance connection is direct. Misalignment can shave a tyre below the legal 1.6 millimetre limit on one shoulder while the centre tread still looks healthy, which is exactly the kind of uneven wear an inspection lane or an insurance surveyor will flag. A computerised alignment check after a hard kerb strike, after fitting new tyres, and roughly every ten thousand kilometres of normal UAE driving is cheap insurance against replacing tyres at half their life. Ask for the before-and-after printout; it is the standard proof that the work was actually done, and any properly equipped workshop produces it without being asked.

Balancing is the companion job. Wheel weights thrown off by pothole hits or kerb scrapes show up as a steering vibration at highway speed, typically between 100 and 120 km/h, and prolonged vibration accelerates wear in suspension bushes and steering components. Balancing happens on a machine with the wheel off the car, which mobile fitters with van-mounted equipment can do at your building; alignment needs a laser rig and a level platform, which means a workshop visit. A vendor who claims to do full alignment in your basement car park is describing a service they cannot deliver.

Inspection day: what the testing lane actually checks

Annual registration renewal in the UAE runs through vehicle testing centres: Tasjeel and Shamil lanes in Dubai and the northern emirates, ADNOC inspection centres in Abu Dhabi. On tyres, the inspector's checklist is consistent: DOT dates within five years, tread depth above the legal minimum across the full width, no sidewall cracking, bulges or exposed cord, matching sizes across each axle, and sizes consistent with the vehicle's approved fitment. The spare gets less scrutiny than the road wheels, but a shredded or ancient spare invites a closer look at everything else.

Failing on tyres is among the most common and most avoidable inspection outcomes, and the timing is always bad: the test happens when registration is expiring, so a fail means buying tyres under deadline pressure at whatever price is nearest. The better sequence is to check your own DOT dates and tread a month before renewal is due, and book replacement or repair calmly through the tamam app, where multiple verified vendors quote against each other in AED ranges and the work happens at your home or office on your schedule rather than in a testing-centre car park.

A tread-depth check needs no tools worth mentioning: the wear bars moulded into the grooves sit at the legal limit, and when the surrounding tread is flush with them, the tyre is finished. Check the inner shoulder as well as the part you can see standing up, because alignment wear hides on the inside edge, and the inner shoulder is precisely where the inspector will look. If you want a number rather than a bar, any fitter carries a tread-depth gauge and will read all four tyres in under a minute; anything approaching two millimetres in a UAE summer is due for planning, not just monitoring, because braking distances in the wet degrade sharply well before the legal limit arrives.

what it costs

Tyre pricing in the UAE moves with size, brand tier and speed rating far more than with the fitting labour itself. A full set for a compact car on budget GCC-spec brands and a set of premium run-flats for a German SUV sit at opposite ends of the same market, which is why every figure below is a range. Fitting, balancing and new valves are normally included in a quoted set price; alignment is a separate line item because it happens on a workshop rig.

jobtypical range
Puncture repair, mobile visit (per tyre, patch-plug from inside)AED 40–120
New tyre set (4), compact car, budget GCC-spec brands, fittedAED 200–700
New tyre set (4), mid-size sedan, mainstream brands, fittedAED 600–1,200
New tyre set (4), SUV or premium sizes including run-flats, fittedAED 900–1,500
Wheel balancing, four wheelsAED 60–160
Computerised wheel alignment (workshop)AED 100–250
Nitrogen inflation, full setAED 20–60
TPMS valve service kit or sensor work, per wheelAED 30–150

Treat these as orientation bands rather than quotes: final pricing comes from comparing the AED ranges quoted by verified vendors for your exact tyre size and brand in the tamam app.

Mobile tyre fitting at your building: how a compliant visit runs

A properly equipped tyre van is a small workshop: a demounting machine and a balancer bolted into the load bay, a generator or inverter to run them, a compressor, a torque wrench, jack and stands rated for your vehicle, and the tyres themselves, confirmed against your size code before the van ever leaves. The size sits on your current sidewall in the form 225/45 R17 plus load and speed indices; send a clear photograph of it, and of the DOT date, when you request quotes. That one photo prevents the most common mobile-fitting failure, which is the right brand in the wrong size arriving at your door.

The visit itself needs three things from you: a place for the van to stand within a few metres of the car, permission if the building requires contractor registration at security, and the wheel-lock key if your car has locking nuts, which is the single most common cause of a wasted visit. A four-tyre change with balancing runs roughly 60 to 90 minutes on site; a single puncture repair is usually under half an hour. Basement car parks are workable for puncture repairs and single swaps, but full sets go faster in open-air or ground-level bays where the van's equipment can run beside the car.

What a mobile fitter legitimately cannot do at your home is computerised wheel alignment, which needs a level platform and a fixed rig. A good vendor says this plainly and offers the sensible sequence: fit and balance at your building, then an alignment appointment at the workshop within the week. Booking through tamam keeps that two-step arrangement with the same vendor in one thread, with the quote, payment and any follow-up coordinated in-app or over WhatsApp rather than through a phone number on a business card you will lose.

how it plays out emirate by emirate

dubai

Dubai's tyre trade clusters around Al Quoz and Ras Al Khor, where wholesale pricing is sharpest but stock age varies enormously between neighbouring units, so the DOT check matters most exactly where the deals look best. Registration testing runs through RTA-authorised Tasjeel and Shamil centres, which apply the five-year rule without sentiment. For residents of Marina, JLT or Downtown towers, the practical constraint is building management: most towers require mobile fitters to register at security and work in designated visitor bays rather than your own basement slot, so confirm access rules with the concierge before booking a van.

abu dhabi

Abu Dhabi inspections run through ADNOC vehicle inspection centres, and the emirate's driving profile is the hardest on tyres in the country: the runs to Al Ain and toward the Saudi border are long, fast and relentlessly hot, which is where age and heat-grade shortcuts get exposed. Mussafah is the workshop district for the capital, with everything from truck retreaders to premium specialists. Al Ain deserves its own note: inland summer temperatures exceed the coast, garages and shaded villa parking help tyres last, but any car doing the Abu Dhabi commute weekly should be on temperature grade A rubber without exception.

sharjah

Sharjah's Industrial Areas hold one of the largest used-tyre and budget-tyre markets in the Gulf, which makes it simultaneously the cheapest place to buy and the easiest place to buy something you should not. Part-worn stock and aged imports concentrate here, so the sidewall date check is non-negotiable. Sharjah Municipality has run recurring campaigns against non-compliant tyre stock in the industrial zones. For apartment residents in Al Nahda, Al Majaz and Al Khan, tight and often double-stacked basement parking makes mobile fitting awkward; a ground-level visitor bay or street-side spot arranged in advance saves the technician and your morning.

ajman

Ajman's compact size means most residents live within fifteen minutes of a workshop, but a large share of the emirate's cars spend their working day on the E311 commuting into Dubai, so tyres here do highway mileage that belies the small-emirate address. The Ajman DED licenses local fitters, and the Jurf industrial area holds the main workshop strip. Housing is a mix of older low-rise blocks with open-air parking and newer towers along the corniche; open-air parking means tyres bake year-round, which shortens their chemical life, so Ajman cars often hit the age limit before the tread limit.

ras al khaimah

RAK adds terrain no other emirate really has: the climb to Jebel Jais is the country's longest mountain road, and repeated hard cornering and braking on the descent puts heat into tyres and brakes in a way flat-emirate driving never does. Gravel and rockfall debris on wadi-side roads also raise puncture rates. Villas with private driveways dominate the housing stock, which makes mobile fitting straightforward, and vendors travelling up from Sharjah and Dubai commonly serve the emirate, so booking a day ahead rather than same-day is the realistic expectation for anything beyond a puncture.

fujairah

Fujairah's tyre picture is shaped by the port and the mountains. The truck corridor feeding the port and the fuel terminals scatters debris along the E99 and E84, and shredded truck-tyre fragments on the carriageway are a genuine hazard as well as a puncture source. East-coast humidity is the other local factor: it corrodes steel valve stems and TPMS hardware faster than the dry Gulf side, so ask for new rubber-sealed valves at every change. Odd or premium sizes may not be stocked locally, and honest fitters will say so; expect a day or two for stock to arrive from Dubai or Sharjah.

umm al quwain

The workshop strip around King Faisal Street covers Umm Al Quwain's walk-in tyre trade, but mobile fitting is what makes sense for villa households: a van with the right size arrives at the driveway, torques the wheels and checks the spare nobody has looked at in years. Heat-rated tyres and the five-year DOT rule apply here exactly as in Dubai. Sizes for less common SUVs may need a day's notice — confirm the exact spec when booking rather than assuming stock.

Before you book, and before the van leaves

  • Photograph your tyre size code (e.g. 225/45 R17 94W) and the DOT date, and attach both when requesting quotes.
  • Check the DOT date on every new tyre before it is mounted; ask for fresher stock if it is already a year or more old.
  • Confirm the vendor's trade licence name and that your invoice will carry a TRN.
  • Locate your wheel-lock key before the visit; a missing key is the most common wasted call-out.
  • Confirm building or community access rules for a fitting van, and reserve a ground-level bay if you can.
  • Watch for final tightening with a torque wrench, not just an impact gun, and re-check torque after 50–100 km.
  • Confirm pressures are set to the door-jamb placard and the TPMS is reset before the technician leaves.
  • Book a workshop alignment within the week when fitting a full set, and keep the printout.
  • Ask for the old tyres to be shown to you, and for warranty terms on the new set in writing.
  • Check your spare's date and pressure while the equipment is out; it fails silently otherwise.

mistakes to avoid

Buying purely on price and receiving aged stock

The cheapest quote for a given brand and size is often cheap because the tyres have been sitting in a hot warehouse for two or three years. You lose that shelf time from the five-year legal clock, and the rubber has aged before its first kilometre. Compare quotes within the normal market band and check the DOT date before mounting.

Plugging a puncture from the outside and calling it fixed

A string plug installed without demounting the tyre is a get-you-home measure, not a repair. A proper repair demounts the tyre, inspects the inner liner for run-flat damage, and fits a combination patch-plug from the inside. Shoulder and sidewall injuries are not repairable at all, whatever a roadside shop says.

Skipping alignment after fitting a new set

New tyres on misaligned geometry start wearing unevenly from day one, and the damage concentrates on the inner edge where you cannot see it. The cost of an alignment is a fraction of the tyre life it protects. Treat fitting and alignment as one job in two stops.

Deleting run-flats without adjusting anything else

Swapping run-flats for conventional tyres on a car with no spare changes the car's safety design: the next puncture strands you on a hard shoulder. If you make the change, carry a proper repair kit or arrange roadside cover, and declare the change to your insurer rather than letting a surveyor discover it after a claim.

Ignoring the TPMS light because the tyres look fine

Underinflation is the leading cause of heat-driven blowouts on Gulf highways, and a tyre can be 30 percent down before it looks soft to the eye. The warning light is the early alarm for exactly the failure mode UAE summers punish hardest. Check pressures the same day the light appears.

Forgetting the spare until inspection day

Spares age on the same five-year chemistry as road tyres, and an underinflated or expired spare is useless at the roadside and awkward at the testing lane. Check its date and pressure twice a year, ideally whenever a fitter already has the car's wheels off.

frequently asked questions

How do I read the manufacture date on my tyres?

Find the DOT code on the sidewall and read the last four digits: the first two are the production week, the second two the year, so 1822 means week 18 of 2022. The full code sometimes appears on only one side of the tyre, so you may need to check the inner sidewall. Check all four tyres plus the spare, because they are rarely the same age.

Is the five-year limit counted from purchase or from manufacture?

From the manufacture date stamped in the DOT code, not from when you bought or fitted the tyre. A tyre that sat in a warehouse for two years before you bought it has only about three years of legal road life left. That is why checking the date at the point of sale matters so much.

Are part-worn or used tyres legal in the UAE?

The trade exists in industrial areas, but used tyres carry unknown impact history, unknown storage conditions and often DOT dates near or past the five-year limit, and municipal campaigns have repeatedly targeted non-compliant stock. Even where a specific tyre might pass inspection today, the safety and insurance exposure is out of proportion to the saving. Budget new GCC-spec tyres start low enough that part-worns rarely make sense.

Can my insurer really reject a claim because of my tyres?

Policies require the vehicle to be roadworthy, and after a serious accident, particularly a blowout, the surveyor will record tread depths and DOT dates. Tyres past the age limit, below 1.6 millimetres of tread, or with pre-existing damage give the insurer grounds to reduce or reject the claim. Keeping your fitting invoices and a photo of the DOT dates is cheap protection.

What is the fine for driving on worn tyres?

The federal traffic rules set a fine of AED 500 and four black points for driving a vehicle with worn or deteriorated tyres, and the car can be impounded. Enforcement steps up in summer, when heat makes marginal tyres fail. The registration inspection is a separate hurdle: worn or expired tyres fail the test regardless of whether you were ever fined.

Do I really need GCC-spec or heat-rated tyres?

Yes, and it is not marketing. Look for the UTQG temperature grade on the sidewall and prefer grade A for regular highway driving; GCC-spec versions of major brands use compounds validated for sustained Gulf heat. A tyre built for a cooler market can be identical in size and still shed tread here in August.

Is nitrogen filling worth paying for?

As an inexpensive add-on, yes: pressures hold slightly longer and stay a little more stable through temperature swings, and the dry gas is kinder to TPMS hardware. It does not replace a monthly pressure check, and topping up with normal air later does no harm. Correct pressure matters far more than which gas is inside.

Can a run-flat tyre be repaired after a puncture?

Sometimes, but the rules are stricter than for conventional tyres. Most manufacturers advise replacement if the tyre was driven at low or zero pressure for any distance, because the reinforced sidewall can be internally damaged in ways inspection cannot reveal. Expect a competent fitter to lean toward replacement, and be wary of one who plugs a run-flat without asking how far it was driven flat.

Can a mobile fitter do wheel alignment at my home?

No. Alignment needs a level platform and a fixed laser or camera rig, which does not fit in a van. Mobile vans can genuinely fit, balance and repair tyres at your building; alignment is a short workshop appointment afterwards. A vendor claiming to do full alignment in your car park is overpromising.

Should I replace two tyres or all four?

Replace in pairs across an axle as a minimum, keeping the same model and size on both sides, and fit the newer pair to the rear on most cars for wet-grip stability. All-wheel-drive vehicles are stricter: many manufacturers require all four tyres to match closely in wear to protect the drivetrain. Mixing brands or tread patterns across an axle can also draw attention at inspection.

Why is my TPMS light on after new tyres were fitted?

Either the sensors need a relearn so the car reads the right positions, the service kits (valve cores and seals) were not renewed, or a sensor was damaged during demounting. It is a fitting-quality issue, not something to ignore, because a dead TPMS means no warning next time a tyre deflates on the highway. Go back to the same vendor and have it resolved under the job.

How often should alignment be checked in the UAE?

After any hard kerb or pothole strike, whenever new tyres go on, and roughly every ten thousand kilometres in normal use, given how dense speed humps and roundabouts are in UAE communities. The tell-tale signs are an off-centre steering wheel, a pull on a level road, or wear concentrated on one edge of a tyre. Ask for the before-and-after printout as proof of work.

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