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Wheel bearings and hub assemblies are the interface between your rotating wheel and stationary suspension — they carry the vehicle's weight while allowing the wheel to spin freely. On most modern vehicles, the wheel bearing is integrated into a sealed hub assembly pressed into the knuckle or bolted directly to it, replacing the old-style serviceable tapered roller bearing. These units typically last 85,000–100,000 miles under normal conditions, though aggressive cornering loads, water intrusion, or a hard pothole hit can shorten that significantly. Symptoms range from a subtle hum at highway speeds to a pronounced grinding that changes pitch when you steer. When buying, match the hub assembly to your specific year, make, model, and trim — ABS tone rings, bolt patterns, and flange diameters vary widely even within the same nameplate. OEM-spec units with double-sealed bearings and pre-set preload are the standard to match; budget-tier assemblies often use lighter-duty seals that fail early in wet or salty climates.
Signs you need replacement
- Cyclic humming or growling noise at highway speeds that changes pitch or volume when you shift your weight by changing lanes — this is the classic failing wheel bearing signature, caused by worn or pitted bearing races.
- Grinding or rumbling that intensifies when turning in one direction indicates the bearing on that side is under load and failing; a right-turn grind typically points to the left hub assembly.
- Loose or wobbly wheel with visible play when the wheel is grabbed at the 3 and 9 o'clock positions and rocked — more than 0.005 inches of radial play means the bearing is worn beyond spec.
- ABS warning light triggered without a brake fault can indicate a damaged or corroded ABS tone ring integrated into the hub assembly, giving the control module erratic wheel speed readings.
- Uneven or rapid tire wear on one corner, particularly feathering or cupping on the inner or outer edge, can result from bearing play introducing inconsistent wheel alignment loads while driving.
- Vibration felt through the steering wheel or floorboard at a specific speed range (typically 45–65 mph) that doesn't match tire imbalance frequency and doesn't respond to tire rotation or rebalancing.
Frequently asked questions
- How long do wheel bearing and hub assemblies typically last, and should I replace both sides at the same time? Most sealed hub assemblies last 85,000–100,000 miles, but mileage and environment vary. If one side fails, the other has usually seen the same wear and road exposure. Replacing both sides during the same job is common shop practice and saves labor cost if the second bearing fails within a year.
- Are aftermarket hub assemblies as reliable as OEM, or is OEM worth the premium? Quality varies significantly in the aftermarket. Brands like Timken, SKF, and Moog manufacture to OEM tolerances and are widely trusted by professional shops. Generic or unbranded assemblies often use lighter seals and lower-grade bearing steel. For daily drivers in salt-belt states, spending the extra $20–40 on a name-brand unit is consistently worth it.
- What does a wheel bearing and hub assembly replacement cost, and what else should I replace at the same time? Parts run $60–$180 per corner depending on vehicle; labor adds $100–$200 per side at a shop. DIY is straightforward on front-wheel-drive vehicles with basic tools, though rear assemblies on AWD platforms can require a press. While the knuckle is off, inspect the CV axle shaft, outer tie rod end, and ball joint — all are accessible at zero additional labor cost.















































