- Region and Language
- Region and language
As you prepare to pack away your winter jackets, make sure your fleet is ready for the warmer days ahead too. With spring right around the corner, it is important to check tire pressure, alignment, brake pads, transmission fluid, and battery health to ensure your fleet vehicles transition smoothly to the next season.

What fleet maintenance includes. Fleet maintenance includes proactive maintenance, regular inspections, prompt repairs, and personalized plans that address each fleet’s unique challenges.
Why spring fleet maintenance matters. The shift from winter to spring and summer requires proactive fleet maintenance to prepare for changing road conditions and reduce the risk of crashes and breakdowns.
When to switch to all-season tires. Once temperatures consistently rise above 7°C (46°F), it’s time to switch from winter to all-season tires.
How road salt affects fleets. Road salt is responsible for costly repairs across fleets each year. It damages underbody components, brake systems, suspension parts, and electrical connections.
From winter recovery to spring performance. Spring fleet maintenance is not only about preparation. It also includes repairing winter wear and addressing damage before utilization increases.
What fleet maintenance includes. Fleet maintenance includes proactive maintenance, regular inspections, prompt repairs, and personalized plans that address each fleet’s unique challenges.
Why spring fleet maintenance matters. The shift from winter to spring and summer requires proactive fleet maintenance to prepare for changing road conditions and reduce the risk of crashes and breakdowns.
When to switch to all-season tires. Once temperatures consistently rise above 7°C (46°F), it’s time to switch from winter to all-season tires.
How road salt affects fleets. Road salt is responsible for costly repairs across fleets each year. It damages underbody components, brake systems, suspension parts, and electrical connections.
From winter recovery to spring performance. Spring fleet maintenance is not only about preparation. It also includes repairing winter wear and addressing damage before utilization increases.
It’s no surprise that seasonal change poses significant risks to your fleet if you’re not prepared. Federal data reports that approximately 12% of crashes each year are weather related, totaling roughly 745,000 incidents. Many of these incidents can be prevented through preparation.
Spring driving conditions can shift quickly. Rain replaces snow, but traction is still a challenge. The Texas Department of Transportation notes that hydroplaning can occur at 55 miles per hour with as little as 0.08 inches of water on the road. Tread depth and inflation pressure directly influence that risk.
Spring is peak pothole season. According to AAA, pothole damage affects 1 in 10 drivers each year, costing billions nationwide. For fleets, that could mean unexpected tire, suspension, and alignment repairs. Be on the lookout for potholes, slow down in pothole-prone areas, and avoid sudden swerves. Driving cautiously helps reduce damage, downtime, and repair costs.
Whether you operate a small business or a large enterprise, a planned winter to spring fleet maintenance transition keeps operations running smoothly. Winter leaves its mark on vehicles. Road salt corrodes undercarriages, cold starts strain batteries, and moisture affects brakes. To help you stay ahead of these issues, we’ve outlined a simple spring fleet maintenance checklist below.
Maintenance area | What to inspect | How it supports performance |
|---|---|---|
Tires | Tread depth, inflation pressure, seasonal change, and winter tire storage | Reduces hydroplaning risk, uneven wear, and premature tire degradation |
Undercarriage | Corrosion, loose fasteners, coating damage | Prevents long-term structural damage |
Brakes | Pads, rotors, brake lines, parking brake | Reduces safety risk and out-of-service violations |
Suspension & alignment | Steering stability after pothole impacts | Ensures proper handling and long tire life |
Transmission & drivetrain | Fluid level, color, odor, leaks | Prevents overheating and internal wear |
Battery | Load test, terminal corrosion, wiring condition, battery age | Reduces no-start events and downtime |
Wiper blades | Cracking, streaking, uneven clearing | Maintains visibility in heavy rain |
Lighting | Bulbs, wiring, headlight alignment | Improves visibility and reduces safety risk |
Winter tires help your fleet maintain traction and control in snowy conditions. They reduce risk and improve stability when road conditions are unpredictable. However, once temperatures consistently rise above 7°C (46°F), winter tires lose effectiveness and wear faster on dry pavement. Switching at the right time extends tire life and ensures your fleet is equipped for spring and summer driving.
The transition does not end when the tires come off the vehicle. Proper cleaning and storage are essential to protect your investment. Before storing winter tires:
Remove road salt and debris thoroughly and allow them to dry completely.
Store them indoors in a cool, dark, and dry environment away from direct sunlight and heat sources.
Standardizing storage practices across locations helps maintain consistent tire condition and reduces premature replacement costs next season.
Spring temperature swings affect tire pressure. Small changes in inflation can alter wear patterns, handling response, and braking stability. There is also a measurable financial impact. The U.S. Department of Energy notes that underinflated tires reduce fuel economy, even with small pressure deviations.
Road salt is highly corrosive, contributing to billions of dollars in vehicle and infrastructure repairs each year in the United States. Salt exposure affects underbody components, brake systems, suspension parts, and electrical connections. Electric vehicles require additional attention due to the placement of battery packs and cooling lines along the undercarriage.
To help protect vehicles and extend asset life, spring fleet maintenance should include:
A thorough exterior and undercarriage wash.
A visual inspection to identify early corrosion, loose fasteners, or protective coating damage.
Interior cleaning to remove salt and moisture tracked into the cabin.
Routine cabin air filter replacement to support both vehicle condition and HVAC performance as temperatures rise.
Brake issues are one of the most common reasons vehicles are placed out of service during roadside inspections across North America. That’s why spring is the right time to take a closer look. Winter moisture, salt, and debris can speed up corrosion and cause uneven wear on brake pads and rotors. If drivers notice changes in pedal feel, vibration, or longer stopping distances, those signals should be addressed quickly.
As part of your spring fleet maintenance routine:
Measure brake pad thickness.
Inspect rotor condition for wear or corrosion.
Review brake lines for damage or deterioration.
Test parking brake function.
If vehicles have encountered significant potholes, include a suspension and steering check to help maintain braking stability.
Winter conditions place added strain on drivetrain systems. As temperatures drop, lubricants thicken, which can increase internal stress during cold starts. Short trips and frequent idling further compound that impact. Spring is the right time to evaluate transmission performance before warmer weather and higher utilization increase demand.
Follow manufacturer guidance, especially for severe service conditions.
Check fluid level and color, and note any burnt odors that may indicate overheating.
Inspect seals and lines for leaks.
Winter places significant strain on vehicle batteries. Cold temperatures reduce cranking power, meaning the battery has less ability to deliver the energy needed to turn the engine over during startup, and repeated cold starts increase internal wear. A battery that seemed reliable in freezing conditions may still carry hidden degradation. As temperatures rise, heat accelerates internal breakdown, increasing the risk of failure during high utilization periods. For fleets operating on tight schedules, a no-start event can quickly disrupt routes and service commitments.
Spring temperature swings continue to strain batteries, making proactive inspection essential before summer demand rises.
Conduct battery load testing as part of spring fleet maintenance.
Inspect electrical connections thoroughly.
Check for corroded terminals that can interfere with charging and starting performance.
Clean or secure connections as needed.
Evaluate battery age to reduce the risk of unexpected failures.
Visibility is one of the most overlooked safety factors in fleet operations. Winter ice and snow can stiffen rubber and cause micro tears along the edge of wiper blades. The damage may not be obvious until spring rain exposes streaking or inconsistent clearing.
When drivers encounter heavy rain during spring and summer weather, degraded blades reduce reaction time and increase fatigue. Streaking and uneven clearing force drivers to concentrate harder to see lane markings, brake lights, and road hazards, increasing mental strain over longer routes. Poor visibility is not just inconvenient. It affects braking distance, lane control, and hazard detection.
As part of your spring fleet maintenance plan, inspect blades for cracking, skipping, or uneven contact across the windshield. If performance is inconsistent, replace them.
Lighting systems support visibility in early mornings, late evenings, and poor weather conditions. Winter road conditions can affect bulb integrity, wiring connections, and headlight alignment, particularly if vehicles encountered potholes or minor impacts.
A spring inspection should confirm that all exterior and interior lights function properly, including brake lights, turn signals, reverse lights, and cargo illumination where applicable. Equally important is headlight alignment. Misaligned headlights reduce forward visibility and may create glare for other drivers, increasing risk.
To ensure consistency, tie lighting inspections to scheduled oil changes or preventative service intervals. This creates a repeatable process that prevents small issues from going unnoticed.
Fleet maintenance companies offer strategic and customized plans built around the challenges and risks your fleet faces. A strong maintenance strategy includes proactive service, regular inspections, prompt repairs, and round-the-clock support. Together, these solutions help reduce downtime and prevent costly breakdowns. Maintenance strategies typically include:
Proactive maintenance
National repair network coordination
Cost control and reporting
EV servicing support
These resources help your drivers stay at ease and keep your operations running smoothly.
As a global fleet management leader, Element integrates structured maintenance programs into your broader lifecycle strategy.
Element delivers preventive maintenance and repair oversight through a network of more than 50,000 repair facilities across North America. Through negotiated pricing, proactive scheduling, and data-driven insights, clients save an average of $372 per vehicle per year on maintenance-related costs.
Element’s integrated maintenance approach includes:
Proactive maintenance scheduling
Access to dedicated repair facilities and professionals
Telematics-informed diagnostics and reporting
24/7 multilingual roadside assistance
EV maintenance oversight and compliance support
That’s how Element helps organizations drive stronger uptime and long-term cost efficiency.
For small and mid-sized fleets looking to simplify operations and control costs, Element Fleet Essentials (EFE) offers flexible, right-sized solutions designed to deliver expert support without the complexity of a full-scale program. Learn more about how EFE can help your business.
Spring fleet maintenance is about preparation, not reaction. It is your opportunity to correct winter wear and tear, address hidden risks, and strengthen reliability before utilization increases. When you take a structured approach to seasonal transition, you reduce unexpected downtime, stabilize operating costs, and support safer operations throughout the spring and summer months.
Explore how a structured fleet maintenance strategy can help you move from winter recovery to spring performance with confidence.
Seasonal change is inevitable. Disruption doesn’t have to be.