Driving with no steering assist won’t instantly ruin a car, but it can strain steering parts, tires, and belts while raising crash risk at low speeds.
When power steering goes out, the first thing you notice is your arms. The wheel suddenly feels like it gained weight. Parking turns into a workout. Tight corners feel awkward. It’s easy to assume the only problem is comfort.
But the bigger question is what that extra steering effort does to the car. Can you limp home without wrecking anything? Will one drive turn into a costly repair? The honest answer depends on what failed and how far you push it.
This guide breaks down what gets stressed, what usually stays fine, and when driving even a short distance can turn a small fault into a mess. You’ll also get a simple checklist near the end so you can make a calm call on the spot.
What Power Steering Does And What Changes When It’s Gone
Power steering is steering assist. Your hands still turn the wheel, and the front wheels still steer. The assist system just reduces effort, mostly at low speed and while parking.
Older cars often use hydraulic assist: a pump pressurizes fluid, and that pressure helps move the steering rack or gearbox. Many newer cars use electric power steering (EPS): an electric motor adds assist based on sensors and control logic.
When assist drops out, the car stays steerable. That’s the part that tricks people. The steering still “works,” so it feels safe to keep going. The catch is how much extra force you need, and how that force shows up as load in parts that were meant to operate with assist.
Why It Feels Worst At Parking Speeds
At low speed, the tires scrub across the pavement instead of rolling freely while turning. That scrub adds resistance. Power steering is built to overcome it. Without assist, your arms supply the missing force.
Once you’re moving, the tires roll more easily, so steering effort drops. That’s why many people say, “It’s fine once I’m driving.” It can feel fine, yet still be a poor idea depending on the failure type.
Two Types Of Failure With Two Different Risks
Loss of assist with no leak: Common with EPS faults, blown fuses, weak charging system, or a failing motor/controller. The car becomes heavy to steer, but nothing is spraying fluid.
Loss of assist with a leak or broken belt: Common with hydraulic systems. Fluid may drip or spray. A belt may squeal, slip, or snap. This is where “driving anyway” can stack damage fast.
What Can Get Damaged If You Keep Driving
Driving without power steering doesn’t usually break the steering rack in one afternoon. The damage pattern is more sneaky: extra stress, extra heat, extra friction, and secondary failures when a leak or belt issue is the root cause.
Steering Rack, Tie Rods, And Ball Joints See Higher Loads
When you wrench the wheel hard at a crawl, you’re pushing high force through the steering rack, inner and outer tie rods, and ball joints. Those parts can handle load, yet repeated high-effort steering can speed up wear, especially if a joint is already dry, torn, or loose.
A common “tell” after driving with no assist is a new clunk, a notchiness at center, or steering that no longer feels smooth. If those show up right after the assist failure, treat it as a sign that an older part hit its limit.
Power Steering Pump Can Be Hurt By Running Dry
In a hydraulic setup, the pump relies on fluid for lubrication. If you’ve lost fluid from a leak and you keep the engine running, the pump can cavitate (pull in air), overheat, and score its internal surfaces. That can turn a simple hose leak into a pump replacement.
If you see fluid under the front of the car or you smell burnt fluid, don’t keep running the system. Even short trips can be rough on a pump when it’s starved.
Belts And Pulleys Can Create A Second Problem
Many cars drive the power steering pump with a serpentine belt. If the pump seizes or the pulley binds, the belt can shred. On some engines, that same belt also drives the alternator and water pump. If it fails, you can end up with a dead battery or an overheating engine on top of the steering issue.
Squealing that rises with engine RPM, a burning rubber smell, or visible belt dust are red flags. If you notice these, stop driving the car.
Tires Can Scuff And Flat-Spot During Low-Speed Maneuvers
No-assist steering often leads to “sawing” at the wheel in short jerks while parking. That can scrub the tread and heat the tire shoulders. One parking session won’t destroy tires, but repeated tight maneuvers can speed up uneven wear, especially if tire pressure is low or alignment is already off.
Electric Power Steering Issues Can Hide Charging Problems
EPS needs steady voltage. If your alternator is weak or the battery is near the edge, EPS may shut off first to save power for other systems. In that case, the real fault isn’t the steering motor. It’s the electrical supply.
If your dash shows battery warnings, flickering lights, or slow cranking along with heavy steering, treat it like an electrical fault with steering symptoms.
Does It Damage Your Car To Drive Without Power Steering? What Usually Happens
Most of the time, one short drive at moderate speed with no-assist steering won’t destroy the steering system. The bigger risks come from (1) a hydraulic leak that starves the pump, (2) a belt/pulley issue that can cascade, and (3) the safety side: sudden heavy steering during a turn, parking lot, or emergency lane change.
If you’re trying to judge whether the car can move a short distance, focus on the root cause clues: leaks, smells, noise, belt condition, and warning lights.
Also, don’t ignore inspection basics. Steering problems that create excess play, binding, or uneven assist can fail roadworthiness checks. The UK’s official MOT inspection guidance for steering covers what testers check and what can count as a defect, including electronic power steering issues. MOT steering inspection manual is a useful reference for what “not right” looks like on paper.
And if your steering issue feels tied to a defect pattern, recalls do happen for steering and steering-assist systems. You can check by VIN on the official site. NHTSA recall lookup can confirm if there’s an open steering-related recall on a vehicle in the US.
| Situation You’re In | What The Car Is Going Through | What To Watch For Next |
|---|---|---|
| EPS light on, no leaks | Assist motor shuts off; steering stays mechanical | Battery/charging warnings, intermittent assist, heavy steering that comes and goes |
| Hydraulic fluid low from a slow seep | Pump pulls air at times; heat rises in the pump | Whine while turning, foamy fluid, steering that gets heavier after a few minutes |
| Hydraulic hose burst or fast leak | Pump runs dry; internal wear can spike fast | Fluid puddle, burnt smell, sudden loss of assist right after a turn |
| Belt slipping on the pump pulley | Pump speed drops; belt heats and sheds material | Squeal on startup or turns, belt dust, steering that changes with RPM |
| Pump pulley binds or pump starts to seize | Belt overload; risk of belt failure and accessory loss | Sharp squeal, burning rubber, belt fraying, rising coolant temp if belt also runs the water pump |
| Front tires underinflated | Steering effort climbs; joints and rack see more load | Steering feels “stuck” at low speed, shoulder wear, tire warning light |
| Worn tie rod or ball joint already present | Extra force can push play into a more obvious knock | Clunks over bumps, steering wander, uneven tire wear that shows up soon |
| Driving in tight city streets and parking often | More full-lock turns and tire scrub without assist | Hot tire smell after parking, quicker edge wear, fatigue that makes steering inputs sloppy |
When Driving Without Assist Is A Safety Problem, Not Just A Comfort Problem
Even if the car is still steerable, loss of assist can change how quickly you can react. That matters most in three places: parking lots, on-ramps, and sudden lane changes.
Parking Lots And Tight Turns
Low speed means the highest steering effort. That’s when a driver may not turn fast enough to avoid a curb, pole, or another car backing out. If you’re already feeling the wheel fight you, this is where a “short trip” can end with a bent rim or sidewall damage.
Emergency Steering Inputs
Many drivers discover loss of assist mid-turn. The wheel gets heavy, then they understeer wide. If traffic is near, that’s a rough moment. If you’re unsure you can steer confidently with both hands, it’s smarter to stop.
Sudden Changes In Steering Effort
Steering that changes effort without warning is a bigger concern than steering that is consistently heavy. Intermittent assist can catch you off guard. Some safety investigations describe steering effort changes and loss of assist as crash-risk factors, which is why defect reporting and recalls exist for steering systems.
If you want a glimpse of how seriously steering-assist failure is treated in safety work, NHTSA has published research on functional safety needs in electric power steering systems. It’s technical, yet it makes the point that steering assist is treated as a safety-relevant control system. NHTSA electric power steering functional safety report provides that background.
Simple Checks You Can Do Before Moving The Car
You don’t need a scan tool to spot the big “stop now” signs. A quick walk-around and a two-minute under-hood check can tell you whether driving is low-risk or a bad bet.
Check For Fluid Under The Front
If you see fresh fluid pooling near the front axle line, treat it as a leak until proven otherwise. Power steering fluid can look amber, red, or clear depending on the spec. If the reservoir is empty, don’t run the engine to “see if it comes back.”
Listen For Belt Noise
Start the engine with the hood up if it’s safe to do so. A steady squeal that spikes when you turn the wheel can signal belt slip. A grinding noise near the pump can point to a pulley or pump problem.
Check Tire Pressure
Low tire pressure makes heavy steering worse. If a tire is low, fix that before judging the steering system. A simple top-up can reduce effort and make it safer to maneuver to a repair spot.
Note Dashboard Warnings
EPS systems often throw a warning light or message when assist is reduced. If you also see a battery symbol or multiple electrical warnings, treat the fault as charging-related until checked.
How Far Can You Drive Without Power Steering
There’s no universal safe distance. The better question is whether the car is stable and predictable for the path you plan to take.
If you can steer smoothly with both hands, there’s no leak, there’s no belt noise, and the route is low-speed with wide turns, a short move to a nearby repair spot can be reasonable. If the route needs tight parking maneuvers, sharp turns, steep ramps, or heavy traffic, the risk climbs fast.
Don’t judge this by strength alone. Fatigue matters. If your arms start to burn, your steering inputs get sloppy, and that’s when curb strikes and close calls happen.
| What You’re Seeing | Drive It? | Next Move |
|---|---|---|
| No leaks, steering is heavy but steady, no belt noise | Maybe | Use a short, low-speed route with wide turns; avoid parking garages and tight spots |
| Fresh fluid puddle or reservoir empty | No | Don’t run the pump dry; arrange a tow or mobile repair |
| Burning smell or belt squeal that rises with RPM | No | Risk of belt failure and accessory loss; stop and inspect before moving |
| Steering effort changes on and off while driving | No | Intermittent assist can surprise you mid-turn; park and diagnose |
| Battery warning lights, dimming lights, slow cranking | No | Charging fault can shut EPS off and strand the car; check battery/alternator |
| Clunks, binding, or the wheel won’t return smoothly | No | Steering joint or rack issue can worsen with load; don’t push it |
| You can’t steer confidently with both hands at low speed | No | Safety risk is high in parking lots and turns; get help moving the car |
How To Reduce Wear If You Must Move The Car
Sometimes you need to get a car out of traffic, off a narrow street, or into a safer spot. If moving it is the least-bad option, keep the goal narrow: short distance, low complexity, no extra strain.
Use Rolling Turns, Not Full-Lock Cranks
Try to keep the car rolling slowly while turning. Turning the wheel while stopped creates the highest scrub load on the tires and steering parts. Even a crawl can drop effort.
Plan Wide Arcs
Avoid tight U-turns and cramped parking maneuvers. If you must park, pick a spot you can drive into and drive out of with a wide path.
Keep RPM Low
If you suspect belt slip or pump noise, revving the engine can make heat build faster. Keep it gentle and steady.
Don’t Keep Testing It Repeatedly
Repeatedly turning lock-to-lock to “see if it comes back” adds load and heat. If assist is gone, accept that and move to diagnosis or repair steps.
What To Fix First So The Problem Doesn’t Return
Once the car is safe and parked, the repair path depends on the type of system and what failed.
Hydraulic Systems: Leak Source And Fluid Condition
Common leak points include hose crimps, rack seals, and the pump shaft seal. If the fluid is low, you want to know why. Topping off without finding the leak can leave you with the same failure again, often at the worst time.
If the fluid looks dark or smells burnt, the system may have overheated. That can shorten pump life and make seals swell or harden over time.
Electric Systems: Power Supply And Fault Codes
EPS problems often tie back to voltage supply, poor grounds, sensor faults, or the assist motor/module. A proper scan can pinpoint the path fast, yet even without a scan tool you can spot charging issues from weak starts and electrical warnings.
Alignment And Tire Health After A No-Assist Episode
If you drove any distance with heavy steering, take a close look at tire edges and listen for new noises on turns. A curb bump that would usually be avoided can happen during no-assist steering, and small impacts can nudge alignment.
Checklist You Can Use In The Moment
Use this quick list the next time the steering goes heavy. It’s built to keep you out of the two common traps: driving with a dry pump, and pushing through a belt problem.
Before You Move
- Look under the front for fresh fluid.
- Check the power steering reservoir level if the car has one.
- Listen for belt squeal or grinding at idle.
- Check tire pressure if a tire looks low.
- Note warning lights tied to EPS or the battery/charging system.
If You Decide To Move It
- Use both hands and keep speed low.
- Make wide turns and avoid tight parking maneuvers.
- Keep the distance short and the route simple.
- Stop if you smell burning, hear sharp squeal, or see new fluid dripping.
If you’re still unsure after those checks, choose the safer option. A tow costs money. A curb strike, overheated engine from a lost belt, or a crash costs more.
References & Sources
- UK Government (GOV.UK).“MOT Inspection Manual: 2. Steering.”Lists steering checks and defect examples, including electronic power steering considerations in roadworthiness testing.
- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).“Check for Recalls.”Official VIN-based tool to confirm open recalls, including steering and steering-assist defects where applicable.
- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).“Functional Safety Assessment Of a Generic Electric Power Steering System.”Technical report describing safety-related considerations and failure modes in electric power steering systems.

Certification: BSc in Mechanical Engineering
Education: Mechanical engineer
Lives In: 539 W Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75208, USA
Md Amir is an auto mechanic student and writer with over half a decade of experience in the automotive field. He has worked with top automotive brands such as Lexus, Quantum, and also owns two automotive blogs autocarneed.com and taxiwiz.com.