Trailers accumulate wear from every mile driven, weather exposure, and the repeated stress of loading and unloading cargo. Unlike your tow vehicle, which gets regular oil changes and scheduled service, trailers often sit idle between uses, losing tire pressure and developing hidden problems.

Missed issues like underinflated tires, faulty wiring, or worn wheel bearings are leading causes of roadside breakdowns and collisions involving trailers. According to safety data, approximately 12% of large truck crashes involve mechanical failures such as brake problems or tire blowouts. While exact trailer-specific statistics are harder to isolate, lighting failures and improper load securement contribute to many preventable accidents that go underreported.

This trailer inspection checklist walks through every major system, why it matters, and what failure actually looks like in the field. If you own or regularly tow a trailer in Utah, this is the walkthrough to bookmark.

Why Trailer Inspections Matter Before You Tow

Many US states require trailers over specific weight thresholds to meet inspection and lighting standards, even for private owners. For example, Texas exempts trailers with a gross weight of 7,500 lbs or less from safety inspections, while Connecticut mandates brakes on all wheels for trailers with a GVWR of 3,000 lbs or more. Understanding your state’s safety regulations helps you stay compliant and avoid fines.

Regular trailer inspections reduce long-term costs by catching rust, bearing problems, and frame issues while repairs are still affordable. A seized bearing caught during a pre-trip check costs a fraction of what you’d pay after a wheel locks up on the highway. Keeping an inspection log with dates and findings can also help with insurance claims after an incident by demonstrating a pattern of responsible maintenance.

How to Perform a Trailer Inspection

If you’re prepared to inspect your own trailer, park the unit on level ground, chock the wheels, and keep the tow vehicle in park with the parking brake applied. This prevents unexpected movement while you’re crawling around checking components.

Do a full inspection at the start of each towing season and a shorter pre-trip version before every tow, even short trips within the same city. Problems don’t announce themselves based on trip length, and a five-minute check can save time dealing with a breakdown later.

Have these items handy during your inspection:

  • Tire pressure gauge
  • Flashlight
  • Work gloves
  • Clean rag
  • Basic hand tools (wrenches, screwdrivers)
  • Trailer owner’s manual for torque specs and part numbers

Consider creating a printed one-page version of this checklist that can be kept in the tow vehicle’s glove box. Having it on hand makes the process faster and ensures you don’t skip steps.

How Often Should I Inspect My Trailer?

For most people, it’s best to inspect your trailer at the start of each season, after any extended storage, or once a year at minimum. If your trailer sees heavy or frequent use, twice a year is also reasonable.

If your state requires an annual inspection, this checklist can help you prepare for it, but it doesn’t substitute for whatever that program requires. That said, not every item below needs attention before every single haul. Here’s a reasonable approach for most people:

Before every trip: Hitch and coupler connection, safety chains, breakaway cable, lights, and tire pressure. These take a few minutes and cover the failure points most likely to cause an immediate problem on the road.

Every few trips or monthly (whichever comes first): A full walkthrough of this checklist, including tread condition, lug nuts, brake controller function, and a look at the frame and suspension.

Annually or at the start of each season: Wheel bearings, brake inspection, full electrical check, and any items flagged during the year. This is also when you’d address anything that needs a jack, and sometimes, not just a visual pass.

Any time after a hard trip: If you’ve hauled a heavy load, driven rough roads, or heard anything unusual, run through the full checklist before the next haul rather than waiting.

Frequency

Task

Before every tow

Quick walk-around, light test, tire pressure check

Monthly

Tire pressure verification, visual hitch inspection

Quarterly

Lug nut torque check, safety chain inspection

Annually

Full deep inspection, bearing service, brake check

The depth of inspection also depends on the trailer. A utility trailer that moves a lawnmower twice a month needs less scrutiny than a car hauler running weekly. Age matters too. Older trailers, or ones that sat through a winter, deserve more attention at the start of a season than a newer unit in regular rotation.

Some tasks, such as adjusting electric brakes, pressing in new suspension bushings, or rebuilding surge brake actuators, may be better handled by a qualified trailer or RV shop. Know your limits and prioritize safety over saving a few dollars.

Complete Trailer Inspection Checklist

Use the following inspection checklist periodically, rather than before every haul. Move from front to back, checking each system as you go.

Hitch, Coupler, and Safety Chains

  • Inspect the receiver hitch for cracks, rust around welds, and loose or missing mounting bolts. Pay close attention to the welds nearest the vehicle frame, where stress concentrates.
  • Check the drawbar and hitch pin for the correct size, wear, distortion, or missing safety clips. The pin should be fully engaged and the clip through the hole, not just resting on it.
  • The ball size should match the coupler stamp, and the ball nut should be torqued to spec, not just hand-tight. A loose ball can spin off under load.
  • Seat the coupler fully over the ball, close the latch completely, and install a lock or pin. Rock the coupler by hand before pulling. If there’s play, it’s not seated.
  • Examine safety chains for kinks, worn links, or stretched hooks. Cross them under the tongue so if the coupler separates, the tongue is caught before it hits the road.
  • The breakaway cable needs its own anchor point on the tow vehicle frame, not routed through or clipped to the safety chains.

Lighting, Wiring, and Reflectors

  • Plug in the wiring connector and test all functions: running lights, brake lights, turn signals, and hazard flashers. Have someone walk the trailer while you work through each function, or use a circuit tester.
  • Check the plug for corrosion, bent pins, loose wires, and cracked insulation. Clean light corrosion with electrical contact cleaner. Green or white buildup on pins is often the first thing that kills trailer lighting.
  • Inspect the wire harness along the frame for chafing, exposed copper, loose hangers, or sections hanging low enough to catch on road debris.
  • All reflectors (red at rear, amber at sides toward the front) should be clean, uncracked, and visible at night. Faded or mud-caked reflectors don’t count legally or practically.
  • Fix non-functional lights before towing. Lighting violations are among the most common causes of inspection rejections and roadside tickets, and failed brake lights are a rear-end collision waiting to happen.

Tires, Wheels, and Lug Nuts

  • Check all tire pressures (including the spare) with a gauge against the PSI on the sidewall or data plate. Trailer tires are often inflated to max sidewall pressure, which surprises people used to passenger car specs.
  • Inspect tread for center wear (overinflation), shoulder wear (underinflation), and cupping or scalloping (alignment or bearing issues).
  • Look for sidewall cracks, bulges, cuts, embedded nails, and dry rot. Dry rot is especially common on trailers that sit unused for months since the rubber degrades even without miles on it.
  • Check lug nuts for presence and snugness. Torque to spec after any wheel service, and re-torque after the first 50 miles following a wheel removal.
  • Wheels shouldn’t be bent around the rim edge, and bearing dust caps should be present and sealed. A missing cap exposes the bearings to water and grit.

Brakes and Wheel Bearings

Many states mandate brakes on trailers above a certain weight. Connecticut, for example, requires brakes on all wheels for trailers with a GVWR of 3,000 lbs or more. Check your state’s rules if you’re unsure, as thresholds and brake type requirements vary.

  • Test the brake controller by slowly pulling forward in a clear area and applying the trailer brake manually. The trailer should noticeably resist forward movement.
  • Test the breakaway system by briefly pulling the pin while stationary. The trailer brakes should lock up immediately. Reinsert the pin fully after testing. A breakaway system that doesn’t work is useless in the one situation you’d actually need it.
  • After a short drive, feel each hub with the back of your hand. A hub too hot to hold briefly is a warning sign. A bearing that’s failing or a brake that’s dragging will generate noticeable heat before it fails completely.
  • Check the breakaway battery. A dead battery means the breakaway system won’t function. Many are standard sealed lead-acid units that can be tested with a multimeter.
  • Repack or replace wheel bearings at least annually on trailers that see regular use, or any time you notice play in the wheel or grinding during rotation.

Suspension, Axles, and Frame

  • Check leaf springs for broken leaves and missing or loose U-bolts. A single broken leaf often goes unnoticed until the axle shifts under load.
  • Inspect hangers, equalizers, and shackle bolts for cracks, elongated holes, and loose fasteners. Elongated holes in hangers are a sign the suspension has been working loose over time.
  • Check each axle tube for bends, rust-through, or fresh scrapes. Bright metal scrapes on the underside mean the axle has been contacting the road, which is worth investigating before the next trip.
  • Examine frame rails and cross members for rust scaling, cracked welds, and impact damage. Rust is cosmetic until it isn’t. Probe suspect areas with a screwdriver to check for rust-through.
  • The tongue jack should retract fully before towing. A jack that drags on the road at highway speed can catch a bump and fold under, destabilizing the whole trailer.

Deck, Doors, Ramps, and Load Securement

  • Check deck boards for rot, soft spots, loose fasteners, and protruding nails. A soft spot under a loaded pallet or vehicle tire can fail without much warning.
  • Inspect side rails, stake pockets, and D-rings for cracks, crushed metal, and broken welds. D-rings are only as strong as their weld to the frame.
  • Rear doors and tailgates should open, close, latch, and lock properly. A door that won’t latch under vibration is a door that opens on the highway.
  • Check ramps and hinges for bent metal, loose pins, and missing safety latches. Ramp locks should be engaged before driving. A ramp bouncing loose on the road is a hazard to everyone behind you.
  • Inspect tie-downs for fraying, damaged hooks, and missing capacity tags. The working load limit on a strap is typically one-third of its break strength. Don’t assume a strap is adequate just because it’s cinched tight.

Plates, Registration, and Documentation

  • The license plate should be mounted horizontally, unobscured, and secure. Ramps, mud flaps, and rear-mounted cargo are common culprits for blocking plates.
  • The plate light should work when the vehicle lights are on. It’s a small thing that gets missed and leads to unnecessary stops.
  • Registration and any required inspection stickers should be current and match the trailer VIN. A mismatch can create problems at weigh stations or during a roadside stop.
  • Keep registration, proof of insurance, and your most recent inspection record in the tow vehicle, not in the trailer. If the trailer gets impounded or stolen, you still have the paperwork.
  • Log the date, mileage, and findings of each inspection. Patterns in that log often flag problems before they become failures.

Structural and Body Inspection

  • Perform a detailed check of the entire frame, tongue, and cross members for cracks, rust-through spots, and weld failures.
  • Inspect enclosed trailer walls, roof seams, and corners for leaks, water stains, and loose fasteners that can lead to rot or mold.
  • Check fenders and steps for cracks, sharp edges, and loose mounting hardware that could contact tires or injure users.
  • Inspect undercoating and paint; where bare metal or rust is visible, clean the area, apply primer, and repaint to slow corrosion.
  • Confirm that VIN tags and manufacturer labels remain legible—these are often needed for registration or resale.

Running Gear, Bearings, and Brakes Service

  • Raise each wheel safely with a jack and stands, then check for excessive play or roughness when spinning by hand.
  • Remove wheel bearings, clean thoroughly, inspect for pitting or damage, pack with fresh high-temperature wheel bearing grease, and install new grease seals as needed.
  • Inspect brake shoes or pads, magnets (on electric brakes), and drums or rotors for wear, scoring, and contamination by grease.
  • Have brake adjustments and brake controller calibration checked, especially after replacing shoes, drums, or magnets.
  • Torque-check suspension and axle U-bolts to manufacturer specifications while the trailer is unloaded.

Corrosion, Cleanliness, and Storage Preparation

  • Wash the trailer thoroughly, including the underside, to remove road salt and debris that accelerate rust.
  • Apply rust converter or primer to problem spots, followed by touch-up paint or protective coating.
  • Check that drain holes in enclosed or boat trailers are open so water does not pool in corners or channels.
  • Grease moving parts like jacks, hinges, latches, and couplers before long-term storage.
  • Park the trailer on firm, level ground, use blocks under tires to prevent flat spots, and cover tires or the entire trailer if winter storage is expected.

Tips to Keep Your Trailer Safe and Road-Ready All Year

Small habits dramatically reduce the odds of mid-trip failures and extend the life of your equipment.

Use a dedicated notebook or spreadsheet to track dates of tire replacement, bearing service, and brake work with actual calendar dates. This documentation helps you stay on schedule and provides records if you ever need to demonstrate maintenance history.

Invest in high-quality replacement components—ST-rated trailer tires, name-brand bearings, and sealed LED lights. Cheap parts often fail sooner and can create liability exposure if they contribute to an accident.

Have a professional inspection done before major cross-country moves or when buying a used trailer with an unknown history. The cost is minimal compared to discovering hidden defects on the road.

Choose A1 Trailer For Your Trailer Inspection and Repair in Herriman, Utah

A1 Trailer Repair and Welding serves the greater Salt Lake City and Utah County area from our shop in Herriman. We work on all trailer types, including utility trailers, enclosed cargo trailers, flatbeds, equipment trailers, goosenecks, horse trailers, and more.

Our services include full mechanical inspections, structural welding and frame repair, bearing and hub service, brake adjustment and replacement, wiring and lighting repair, and custom fabrication. If your trailer needs it, we can handle it.

If you’ve gone through this checklist and found something you’re not sure about, bring it in. We’ll take a look and give you a straight answer on what needs to be done and what can wait.

Call us or stop by the shop in Herriman. We’re easy to find, and we keep appointments moving, so you won’t be waiting around all day.

FAQ

How often should I inspect my trailer if I only tow a few times a year?

A brief pre-trip inspection is still recommended before every tow, even if you only make a handful of trips each year. Trailers sitting idle develop problems too, such as tire pressure drops, seals dry out, and batteries discharge. Complete a more thorough check at least once annually before the main season starts to catch issues that accumulate during storage. The 10-15 minutes you spend could save hours of roadside trouble.

Do I need a professional to perform an annual trailer inspection?

Many owners can handle basic checks and maintenance themselves with standard tools and a little mechanical aptitude. However, some jurisdictions require certified inspectors for commercial trailers or those exceeding specific weight thresholds. Complex work on brakes, axles, or structural repairs is usually best left to a qualified shop—they have the equipment to properly diagnose and repair issues that could compromise safety. Check your state’s DOT regulations to understand what’s legally required for your specific trailer.

What are signs that my trailer should not be towed until repaired?

Red-flag issues that warrant immediate attention include cracked frame components, severely worn or cracked tires, inoperative brake lights or turn signals, obvious bearing noise or excessive hub heat, non-functioning brakes on trailers required to have them, and a coupler that will not latch securely onto the correct ball size. Any of these defects create serious risk for you and other drivers. Complete repairs needed before towing to avoid accidents and potential liability.

How long does a typical pre-trip trailer inspection take?

Once familiar with the process, most owners can complete a thorough walk-around and functional test in about 10-15 minutes. The first few times may take longer as you learn what to look for and where components are located on your specific trailer. Longer inspections may be needed after winter storage or before long-distance journeys where photo documentation and more detailed checks are warranted.

Are there differences in inspection needs for boat trailers versus utility trailers?

Boat trailers experience frequent immersion in water, which dramatically accelerates corrosion on electrical components, brakes, and wheel bearings. These trailers require extra attention to sealed lights, wiring connections, and more frequent bearing service—some owners repack bearings after every few immersions in saltwater. Utility trailers and cargo trailers may see heavier weight loads and impact stress, requiring closer inspection of frame integrity, deck condition, and suspension components. Tailor your inspection checklist to how your specific trailer is used.