uk Transport & mobility emergencies steering suddenly heavy • heavy steering after driving • power steering failure • steering assist stopped • steering wheel hard to turn • eps warning light • power steering warning light • sudden loss of steering assist • car hard to steer low speed • car harder to manoeuvre • pulled over to check steering • roadside steering problem • steering feels stiff • steering effort increased • possible power steering leak • steering went heavy suddenly • steering problem after restart • steering feels unsafe What to do if…
What to do if…
your steering suddenly feels much heavier and you have pulled over safely to assess it
Short answer
Treat sudden heavy steering as a safety-critical fault: stay parked and arrange help rather than “testing it” in traffic.
Do not do these things
- Don’t rejoin a fast road “just to see if it clears” if steering is still heavy or a steering/power-steering warning light is on.
- Don’t turn the steering hard against full lock repeatedly.
- Don’t open a power-steering fluid cap/reservoir while the engine is hot, or reach near belts/fans.
- Don’t crawl under the car at the roadside or put yourself between your car and traffic.
- Don’t place a warning triangle on a motorway.
What to do now
- Follow the right motorway rule for where you’re stopped (if applicable).
- If you are stopped in a live lane and can’t reach a place of safety: stay in the vehicle with your seat belt on and hazards on, and call 999 (or use the in-car SOS button if you have one) and ask for police help.
- If you are on the hard shoulder or an emergency area and it’s safe to exit: leave by the left doors and wait well away from traffic (ideally behind the safety barrier), with hazards on.
- If you’re not on a motorway: keep hazards on, stay aware of traffic, and avoid standing on the roadside next to your vehicle.
- Look at the dashboard before touching anything. Note any warnings (steering wheel / EPS / power steering symbol), and whether the engine temperature warning is on.
- Only if it’s genuinely safe to step out (e.g., car park/quiet road): do a quick outside check.
- Check for a flat/soft front tyre (a puncture can make steering feel suddenly heavy).
- Look under the front for fresh fluid on the ground. Don’t touch it—just note it.
- If you’re on a motorway shoulder/emergency area and you can’t do this without risk, skip it and wait for help.
- Try one simple restart check (parked, safe, foot on brake). Switch the engine off, wait ~30 seconds, restart, and see if the warning/steering immediately returns.
- If steering is still heavy or the warning stays on: stop troubleshooting.
- Arrange assistance rather than driving. Call your breakdown provider (AA/RAC/insurer/bank account cover) and say: “sudden heavy steering / possible loss of power steering assist,” plus any warning lights and whether you suspect a puncture or leak.
- Move only if you must for immediate safety (last resort). If you can steer reliably at walking speed, creep only a very short distance to a safer nearby place (e.g., off a narrow shoulder into a car park) and stop again. If it feels unpredictable, don’t move—wait for help.
What can wait
- You do not need to diagnose whether it’s a leak, belt, electric steering motor, battery/charging issue, or software right now.
- You do not need to decide on repairs, costs, or which garage while you’re still roadside.
- You do not need to keep “trying fixes” once you’ve arranged recovery.
Important reassurance
A sudden change in steering effort is scary, but pulling over was the right first step. Feeling shaky or unsure is normal—choosing to wait for assistance is often the safest, lowest-regret option.
Scope note
This is first-steps guidance for the next minutes/hours. A proper diagnosis needs a mechanic; continuing to drive with compromised steering can create a serious risk.
Important note
This is general information, not professional mechanical or legal advice. If you feel unsafe where you are, prioritise personal safety and emergency help.
Additional Resources
- https://nationalhighways.co.uk/road-safety/driving-on-motorways/
- https://www.gov.uk/guidance/the-highway-code/breakdowns-and-incidents-274-to-287
- https://www.rac.co.uk/drive/advice/know-how/what-to-do-if-your-car-breaks-down/
- https://www.theaa.com/breakdown-cover/advice/what-to-do-motorway-breakdown
- https://www.rac.co.uk/drive/advice/car-maintenance/power-steering-warning-light/