A Quick Guide on How to Adjust Your Car’s Drum Brakes

Reviewed by

Richard McCuistian, ASE Certified Master Automobile Technician

Technical Reviewer at CarParts.com

Written by CarParts.com Research Team - Updated on December 10th, 2024

Reading Time: 6 minutes
Summary
  • You can adjust drum brakes if you have the right tools.
  • While almost all drum brakes are self-adjusting to keep the shoes very near the drums, installing new brakes requires brake adjustment for optimum stopping and pedal height. Some cars made before the 1960s needed regular brake adjustments. VW Beetles are one example.
  • Some vehicles use drum brakes as their parking brakes, which will also need adjustment.

Drum brakes lose responsiveness as they wear down. Fortunately, you don’t always have to immediately replace them, which would otherwise cost too much. Instead, you can adjust drum brakes to compensate for worn components, restoring your vehicle’s braking performance to acceptable levels.

While you can find a mechanic to adjust the drum brakes, why not do the job yourself? As long as you have the required equipment and sufficient experience in DIY auto repair, you can save on labor costs for drum brake adjustment.

How to Adjust Drum Brakes

You’ll need tools and equipment including wheel chocks, a jack, jack stands, a flashlight, a brake spoon, and a screwdriver.

This is what duo-servo drum brakes look like with the drum removed. | Image Source: Richard McCuistian

The Right Work Area for Drum Brake Adjustment

You’ll want a flat, level, and spacious work area, preferably on concrete rather than grass, dirt, or asphalt. with sufficient room around your vehicle to ensure unimpeded access to the drum brakes underneath.

Generally, your garage is the best place for drum brake adjustment if you have the space. There is a roof and walls that shield you from the elements, illumination provided by lights, and easy access to your tools.

You might feel tempted to park your vehicle on the driveway and adjust the drum brakes, but it’s not advisable due to many factors, including driveways having slight inclines that increase the difficulty of drum brake adjustment. Even if you engage the parking brakes and place wheel chocks behind the tires, there’s always a risk of your vehicle sliding down the inclined surface.

Remove the Rear Wheels? Not Necessarily

If you don’t need to remove the brake drum to inspect the brakes and you can raise your vehicle high enough to gain access (on a creeper, preferably) you can easily adjust the brakes without removing the tire. As a matter of fact, it’s easier this way because you need to spin the tire while adjusting the brakes to make sure you don’t adjust the brakes too tight.

Pro Tips are nuggets of information direct from ASE-certified automobile technicians working with CarParts.com, which may include unique, personal insights based on their years of experience working in the automotive industry. These can help you make more informed decisions about your car.

Pro Tip: If you do this, you’ll need to reverse the adjustment by inserting a screwdriver along with the brake spoon to push the adjuster lever away from the adjuster wheel. Otherwise, you can’t turn the adjuster wheel but one direction, and this tightens the brake even more.

In some vehicles, the rear wheels block easy access to the drum brakes. You must get the wheels out of your way to adjust the brakes. On others, you have to go through the outside of the brake drum or the wheel may not be in the way at all. It varies from OEM to OEM.

Other vehicles position their rear wheels to let you get at the drum brakes. However, the wheels might still get in your way because of their size and mass. If you prefer having lots of elbow room, consider uninstalling the rear wheels to make your life easier.

However, consider as well that it’s easier to determine when you have the brake shoes adjusted to the proper clearance if you leave the wheel in place, and turn the drum using the wheel while adjusting the brake shoes.

Different Locations For the Drum Brake’s Access Hole

This is the view of duo-servo and leading-trailing drum brakes as shown with the drum removed. | Image Source: Richard McCuistian

Drum brakes have an access hole that lets you reach inside them to work on their internal components. The oblong-shaped hole seals itself close with a rubber plug.

The access hole’s location can vary between vehicle models. It’s commonly found on the brake drum, at the bottom of the brake backing plate, or above the axle. If you can’t find the access hole, consult the appropriate manual.

How to Use the Drum Brake Adjuster

You can tighten the drum brakes by working on the drum brake adjuster, a cylindrical part with a notched disk called a star wheel running around its diameter. The star wheel ensures the adjuster only rotates in the direction that tightens the drum brake.

You operate the drum brake adjuster with a brake spoon, a tool that can reach into the access hole and engage the notches of the star wheel. Once the spoon locks with the notches, move the tool up and down like how you would use a lever. The movement rotates the cylinder, which moves the brake shoes closer to the brake drum.

The brake shoes will click as their liner scrapes across the surface of the brake drum. Wait several clicks before spinning the car wheel to see if the brake has tightened. If the wheel spins past one complete rotation, keep adjusting the drum brakes until the part stops after one full rotation.

How to Loosen Tight Brake Shoes

Be careful when you adjust the brake shoe. If you tighten the shoe too much, you might lock it against the brake drum.

Fortunately, you can undo such a mistake by loosening the brake shoe. Insert a screwdriver into the access hole and pry the adjuster arm away from the star wheel, allowing the adjuster to rotate in the opposite direction.

Use the brake spoon to engage the star wheel and rotate the adjuster in the opposite direction to loosen the brake shoe. Then use the screwdriver to lock the adjuster arm with the star wheel.

If you have adjusted the shoes too far out so that they’re too tight against the drum, insert a screwdriver just above the brake spoon and gently push the adjuster lever away from the star wheel so you can reverse adjust the brake shoes so that they’re not too tight. | Image Source: Richard McCuistian

Test the Adjusted Drum Brakes With a Quick Drive

Always follow each drum brake adjustment with a test drive. Keep your vehicle’s speed between 15-20 miles per hour as you hit the brakes to seat the brake shoes properly.

Pro Tips are nuggets of information direct from ASE-certified automobile technicians working with CarParts.com, which may include unique, personal insights based on their years of experience working in the automotive industry. These can help you make more informed decisions about your car.

Pro Tip: If you have just installed new brake shoes and you notice that on the first application the pedal is too low and then releasing and reapplying the brakes quickly gives you a normal pedal, you need to adjust the brake shoes a bit nearer the drums to get the pedal feel right on every application.

Why Do Drum Brakes Need Adjustment?

Usually brakes don’t need adjustment unless you’re replacing the brake shoes. Even though the lining wears thinner with use, the automatic adjusters will keep the brake shoes in adjustment all the way to the point where the lining is gone and it’s metal to metal. The brakes are designed to stop the vehicle until they’re so totally worn out that they fall apart. But don’t ignore brake noises from any of the brakes. Always check them or have them checked if you hear or feel something that seems abnormal.

Usually brakes don’t need adjustment unless you’re replacing the brake shoes.

Richard McCuistian, ASE Certified Master Automobile Technician

Vehicles With Drum-Type Parking Brakes

Most new vehicles use disc brakes that can adjust themselves. Disc brakes have caliper pistons that can extend to compensate for increasingly thinner brake pads.

However, some models use a drum brake as a parking brake. One of the advantages of drum brakes is lower cost, so manufacturers sometimes save on production expenses by using them as a parking brake.

Like their full-time brethren, drum-type parking brakes will need adjustment at intervals. You don’t want to fail a state vehicle inspection because of a loose parking brake.

What Happens After I Receive My Drum Brakes?

If you receive your drum brakes, you can do the replacement and get your ride back on the road in no time. However, if you have any problems with your order, don’t worry. With a CarParts+ membership, you’re free to return any of the orders you’re unhappy with for up to two months.

CarParts+ offers excellent benefits, including extended 60-day returns. So you won’t have to worry about being stuck with components incompatible with your vehicle.

You’ll also get access to other exclusive perks, such as VIP Customer Service, Free Shipping, and 24/7 roadside assistance. Sign up today to have that extra confidence on the road.

About The Authors
Reviewed By Richard McCuistian, ASE Certified Master Automobile Technician

Technical Reviewer at CarParts.com

Richard McCuistian has worked for nearly 50 years in the automotive field as a professional technician, an instructor, and a freelance automotive writer for Motor Age, ACtion magazine, Power Stroke Registry, and others. Richard is ASE certified for more than 30 years in 10 categories, including L1 Advanced Engine Performance and Light Vehicle Diesel.

Written By CarParts.com Research Team

Automotive and Tech Writers

The CarParts.com Research Team is composed of experienced automotive and tech writers working with (ASE)-certified automobile technicians and automotive journalists to bring up-to-date, helpful information to car owners in the US. Guided by CarParts.com's thorough editorial process, our team strives to produce guides and resources DIYers and casual car owners can trust.

Any information provided on this Website is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace consultation with a professional mechanic. The accuracy and timeliness of the information may change from the time of publication.

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CarParts.com Research Team and Richard McCuistian, ASE Certified Master Automobile Technician
Tags: brake-drum