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Disc brake pads and drum brake shoes are the friction components that actually stop your vehicle — pads clamp against rotors in disc brake systems, while shoes press outward against drums in older rear-axle setups. Pad life varies widely: aggressive drivers or heavy vehicles may see wear at 25,000–30,000 miles, while highway-heavy commuters often get 60,000–70,000 miles out of a set. Shoes in low-stress rear drum applications can last 80,000–100,000 miles or longer. When shopping, match the compound to your use case — ceramic pads run cleaner and quieter for daily drivers, semi-metallic compounds handle higher heat for towing or performance use, and organic pads offer softer initial bite for lighter vehicles. Always verify axle position (front/rear), caliper type, and whether your vehicle uses an integrated parking brake shoe behind a rear disc rotor, which is a separate part from the service pads.
Signs you need replacement
- Squealing or grinding noise when braking. Wear indicators on disc pads emit a high-pitched squeal when friction material drops to roughly 2–3mm. Grinding typically means metal-on-metal contact — the pad backing plate against the rotor — and means replacement is overdue.
- Brake pedal pulses or vibrates underfoot. This often points to uneven pad wear or glazed pads transferring material unevenly to the rotor, creating thickness variation. New pads won't fix this without also addressing the rotor surface.
- Vehicle pulls to one side during braking. A stuck caliper or unevenly worn pads on a single corner can cause a noticeable pull left or right. Inspect pad thickness on both sides of the axle before assuming a steering or alignment issue.
- Visible pad thickness below 3mm through the wheel spokes. On many vehicles you can inspect pad thickness without removing the wheel. If the friction material looks thin relative to the backing plate, measure it — manufacturers typically recommend replacement at or before 2mm.
- Parking brake requires excessive handle or pedal travel. Worn parking brake shoes or pads allow the mechanism to travel further before engaging. If adjustment doesn't restore normal engagement, the friction material itself is likely worn beyond spec.
- Brake warning light illuminates on the dash. Some vehicles include electronic wear sensors wired into the pad — when the sensor contacts the rotor, it triggers a dash warning. The light means the pads are at minimum thickness and need immediate replacement.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should disc brake pads be replaced, and does it differ front to rear? Front pads typically wear 2–3× faster than rear pads because front brakes handle 60–70% of stopping force. Expect front pad replacement every 30,000–50,000 miles on most passenger vehicles, with rear pads often lasting through two front pad changes. Always replace as a complete axle set, never one side only.
- Are OEM brake pads worth it, or is aftermarket just as good? OEM pads are engineered to exact friction coefficients for your vehicle's ABS and stability control calibration. Quality aftermarket options from brands like Bosch, Akebono, Wagner, or EBC can match or exceed OEM performance, but avoid unknown-brand "economy" pads — inconsistent friction values affect stopping distance and ABS response in ways that aren't obvious until an emergency stop.
- What else should I replace at the same time as brake pads or shoes? Inspect rotors or drums whenever you replace friction material — if rotors are below minimum thickness or show deep scoring, replace them alongside the pads. It's also the right time to lubricate caliper slide pins, inspect brake hardware kits (shims, clips, springs), and check brake hoses for cracking. Replacing hardware is cheap insurance against uneven wear on your new pads.














































