Most drivers only think about their car when something goes wrong. A dashboard light flickers, a tyre looks low, or the engine struggles on a cold morning, and suddenly that routine check you kept putting off feels very important. The truth is, a little seasonal attention prevents most of those moments entirely.
Your car faces genuinely different challenges in January than it does in July. Treating maintenance as a single annual event means you’re always playing catch-up with the season you’re already in. This guide gives you a clear, season-by-season framework, practical, straightforward, and easy to follow whether you’re driving through Fleet on a frosty commute or heading out of Farnborough on a summer road trip.
Why Seasonal Checks Matter More Than One Annual Service
A yearly service is essential, but it’s a snapshot, not a system. A lot can change in the months between visits, road salt corrodes brake components, summer heat stresses coolant, and cold snaps drain batteries that were perfectly fine in September.
Skipping routine checks between services creates compounding problems. Small issues become expensive ones. Seasonal checks keep you ahead of those costs and keep your car roadworthy all year round.Regular inspections also play a key role, and booking an MOT in Aldershot annually ensures your vehicle meets legal safety standards while identifying hidden issues early.
Autumn Car Maintenance Checklist (September to November)
Autumn is the preparation season. The conditions you encounter in December and January are largely determined by what you do, or don’t do, in October. Roads around Ash and Tongham start throwing up mud and wet leaves, mornings get darker, and temperatures begin to drop. Your car needs to be ready for all of it.
1. Tyres and Tread Depth
Tyre condition is the single most important safety factor as roads get wetter. UK law requires a minimum tread depth of 1.6mm across the central three-quarters of the tyre, but most safety experts recommend replacing tyres at 3mm in autumn before winter conditions arrive. You can check tread depth with a 20p coin, if the outer band of the coin is visible when inserted into the groove, your tyres need attention.
Also check tyre pressure. Cold air causes pressure to drop, and under-inflated tyres handle poorly on wet roads. According to GOV.UK tyre safety guidance, incorrect tyre pressure is one of the most common, and most avoidable, vehicle safety issues recorded in the UK.
Key checks:
- Tread depth on all four tyres, including the spare
- Tyre pressure when tyres are cold
- Visible damage, bulges, or uneven wear
2. Battery Health
Car batteries typically last three to five years. Cold weather doesn’t kill batteries, it exposes the weakness that already exists. A battery that performed fine through summer may not have enough cold cranking power to start your engine on a −3°C morning in Aldershot.
If your battery is over three years old, have it tested before winter arrives. Most garages can run a battery health check in minutes. The cost of a test is considerably less than being stranded.
Signs your battery may be struggling:
- Slow or laboured engine cranking
- Dashboard warning lights illuminating at start-up
- Headlights dimming when the engine is idling
3. Lights and Visibility
Mornings and evenings in autumn are significantly darker. Faulty bulbs that went unnoticed in summer become a legal and safety issue quickly. Walk around the car with the engine running and check every light, headlights, brake lights, indicators, fog lights, and reversals.
Replace wiper blades if they’re leaving smears. A good wiper blade should clear water cleanly in a single pass. If yours are chattering or streaking across the screen, they won’t cope with a heavy downpour on the A331.
Winter Car Maintenance Checklist (December to February)
Winter is the most demanding season for any vehicle. Frost, ice, road salt, and reduced visibility all increase wear and risk simultaneously. Drivers in North Camp and Ash Vale who rely on their car for daily commuting need their vehicle to be dependable regardless of what the weather does overnight.
1. Antifreeze and Screenwash
Antifreeze protects your engine coolant from freezing and your engine block from cracking, one of the most expensive faults a car can suffer. Check the concentration of your antifreeze using an inexpensive tester from any motor factor. Most manufacturers recommend a 50/50 mix of antifreeze and water, which protects down to around −35°C.
Screenwash is equally important and often overlooked. Plain water freezes in the reservoir and jets at below 0°C, leaving you with no forward visibility and a potential blockage. Use a screenwash rated to at least −15°C and keep a spare bottle in the boot.
2. Wipers and Windscreen
Check wiper blades again, they wear faster in cold, dry conditions than in wet summer weather. Run your finger along the rubber edge. If it’s cracked or brittle, replace the blade before you find yourself clearing ice manually with no working wipers.
Keep the windscreen clear of all ice and snow before moving off. It is a legal requirement in the UK to have full visibility before driving. Using a proper ice scraper and de-icer rather than just a small porthole of cleared glass is not optional, and a warm screenwash mix will help maintain visibility on the move.
3. Emergency Essentials to Keep in the Car
No seasonal checklist is complete without this. Breakdowns increase significantly in winter, and being prepared reduces both the danger and the inconvenience.
Keep in the boot throughout winter:
- A set of jump leads or a portable jump starter
- A torch with fresh batteries
- A warm blanket
- A small shovel or traction mat
- A fully charged phone or portable power bank
- A bottle of screenwash concentrate
Spring Car Maintenance Checklist (March to May)
Spring is about damage assessment. Three months of road salt, frost, and wet weather leave their mark, on brake components, paintwork, tyres, and underbody seals. Catching that damage in March is far cheaper than dealing with the consequences in summer. Drivers returning to longer journeys out of Farnham and Fleet should treat a spring check as a reset after winter.
1. Brakes and Underbody
Road salt is highly corrosive. It attacks brake discs, callipers, and any exposed metal underneath the car. If your brakes feel spongey, are squealing, or the car pulls to one side under braking, have them inspected before the problem progresses.
A visual check of the underbody for rust, damage, or loose components is worth doing after a wet winter. If you’re not confident assessing it yourself, If you’re not confident assessing it yourself, booking a professional car service in Aldershot in spring covers these areas as standard and ensures your vehicle is ready for the months ahead.
2. Fluid Levels
Top up or replace the following after winter:
- Engine oil: check level and colour. Dark, gritty oil needs changing.
- Coolant: ensure the level sits between minimum and maximum when cold.
- Brake fluid: should be clear to light yellow. Dark fluid indicates it needs replacing.
- Power steering fluid: check the reservoir if your car has hydraulic steering.
- Windscreen washer fluid: switch from winter concentrate to a standard summer mix.
3. Air Conditioning
Air conditioning is rarely used through winter, but the system still needs attention in spring. Running the AC for ten minutes once a week throughout winter keeps the compressor seals lubricated, if you haven’t done this, run it now and listen for unusual noises.
If the air from your vents isn’t cold or has a musty smell, the system may need regassing or an antibacterial treatment. Most garages can diagnose and regas an AC system quickly.
Summer Car Maintenance Checklist (June to August)
Summer brings its own risks. Heat causes tyre pressure to rise, puts extra strain on the cooling system, and degrades rubber seals faster than any other season. For families heading out on long drives from Farnborough or Aldershot, a pre-trip check is as important as packing the bags.
1. Tyre Pressure and Cooling System
Tyre pressure increases in hot weather as air expands. Check pressure when tyres are cold, before a long journey, not after an hour on the motorway. Over-inflated tyres have a smaller contact patch with the road, reducing grip and increasing stopping distance.
The cooling system works hardest in summer. Check coolant level and condition. If the fluid is rusty or contains visible debris, it needs flushing and replacing. Overheating is one of the most common causes of summer breakdowns on UK roads.
2. Pre-Holiday Vehicle Check
If you’re planning a long trip, it’s always worth having a quick inspection done by a local garage to avoid breakdowns during your journey.
Before any journey over two hours, run through this quick checklist:
- Tyre pressure and tread on all four tyres
- Engine oil level
- Coolant level
- Screenwash topped up
- All lights working
- Brakes responsive with no pulling or noise
- Wipers clearing cleanly
If dashboard warning lights are illuminated before you leave, do not ignore them. An amber light means to investigate soon. A red light means stop and seek advice before continuing.
Keeping On Top of It Year-Round
Building seasonal checks into your routine doesn’t require mechanical knowledge or expensive equipment. Most of what’s covered in this guide takes less than twenty minutes per season and costs very little when caught early. The drivers who avoid costly repairs and unexpected breakdowns aren’t lucky, they’re consistent.
Whether you’re doing a quick school run around North Camp or clocking up motorway miles from Hampshire to the coast, your car deserves the same attention every season brings. A reliable vehicle starts with reliable habits.
Frequently Asked Questions
What car checks should I do before winter? Check battery health, antifreeze concentration, tyre tread depth and pressure, wiper blades, and all lights. Ensure screenwash is rated to at least −15°C and keep emergency supplies in the boot.
How often should I check tyre pressure in winter? At least once a month and before any long journey. Cold air causes pressure to drop approximately 1 PSI for every 10°F reduction in temperature.
Does my car need a seasonal service or are self-checks enough? Both serve different purposes. Self-checks between services catch issues as they develop. A professional service provides a thorough inspection that self-checks cannot replicate. Doing both is the most effective approach.
What should I check on my car in spring? Focus on brake condition, underbody corrosion from road salt, all fluid levels, tyre condition after winter wear, and air conditioning function.
How do I know if my car battery is failing? Slow engine cranking, dashboard warning lights on start-up, and dimming headlights at idle are the main indicators. Batteries over three years old should be tested before winter.
What fluids should I check before a summer road trip? Engine oil, coolant, brake fluid, power steering fluid, and screenwash. Check all levels against minimum and maximum markers when the engine is cold.

