<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>Brakes on Tow With The Flow</title><link>https://towwiththeflow.com/tags/brakes/</link><description>Recent content in Brakes on Tow With The Flow</description><generator>Hugo</generator><language>en-us</language><lastBuildDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://towwiththeflow.com/tags/brakes/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>Brake Failure While Driving Emergency Towing: What to Do Right Now</title><link>https://towwiththeflow.com/brake-failure-while-driving-emergency-towing/</link><pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://towwiththeflow.com/brake-failure-while-driving-emergency-towing/</guid><description>&lt;pre tabindex="0"&gt;&lt;code&gt;
&amp;gt; **Quick Answer:** Pump the brake pedal rapidly to build pressure. Downshift to slow the car. Use the parking brake gradually, not all at once. Steer toward a safe stop: grass, a runoff lane, or a guardrail as a last resort. Once stopped, do not drive the car. Call a tow truck. A vehicle with failed brakes cannot be safely driven to a shop.

## What To Do

1. **Stay calm and keep both hands on the wheel.** Panic leads to overcorrection. The car still steers even without brakes.

2. **Pump the brake pedal hard and fast.** If you have a traditional hydraulic brake system, rapid pumping can rebuild enough pressure to slow the car. This does not work with ABS in the same way, but it still signals the system. Keep pumping.

3. **Downshift immediately.** If you drive a manual, drop gears fast. If you drive an automatic, shift to a lower range: 3, 2, or L. Engine braking will slow you. This works on both highways and surface streets.

4. **Use the emergency brake, but do it gradually.** Yanking it hard at speed will lock the rear wheels and spin the car. Pull it up slowly and steadily while keeping the wheel straight.

5. **Signal and look for an exit.** You need a flat, open area to coast to a stop. Highway runoff ramps, wide shoulders, empty parking lots, and uphill grades all work in your favor. Avoid sharp turns at speed.

6. **Use your horn and hazard lights.** Alert other drivers. Give yourself a path.

7. **If nothing else works, use the environment.** A guardrail, a grass median, or a gentle incline can stop the car without a head-on collision. This is a last resort, but it is better than running a red light or hitting another vehicle.

8. **Once stopped, turn on hazards and stay in the car if traffic is moving nearby.** See [Car Broke Down on Freeway: What to Do Right Now](/car-broke-down-on-freeway-what-to-do/) for guidance on staying safe while you wait.

9. **Call a tow truck. Do not drive.** A single brake failure event can mean a burst brake line, a failed master cylinder, or complete fluid loss. Any of those conditions means the car cannot be trusted until a mechanic inspects and repairs it. [Engine Seized While Driving: Towing Cost and What to Do Right Now](/engine-seized-while-driving-towing-cost/) covers a similar situation where driving the car again is off the table until it is repaired.

10. **Tell the tow operator about the brake failure before they hook up.** They need to know the car may not hold position and will likely use a flatbed. A flatbed is the right call here since dragging a car with compromised brakes on a wheel lift can be unpredictable.

![tow truck loading car](/images/brake-failure-while-driving-emergency-towing/mid.jpg)
*Photo: Pexels*

## What It Might Cost

Emergency towing after a brake failure runs **$75 to $175** for a local tow under 10 miles. Flatbed service adds $20 to $50 over a standard wheel-lift rate. If you are on a highway far from a shop, expect $5 to $10 per mile beyond the base hookup fee.

The brake repair itself depends on the failure point. A brake line replacement runs $150 to $400. A master cylinder is $300 to $600 parts and labor. Full caliper or rotor work on all four corners can push past $1,000. Get the car to a shop before you worry about that number.

If you have roadside assistance through your insurer, check your coverage limits before you call a private tow company. Some policies cap reimbursement at $50 to $100, which may not cover a flatbed tow. [Progressive Insurance Towing Reimbursement Amount](/progressive-insurance-towing-reimbursement-amount/) is one example of how those caps work in practice.


![roadside assistance highway](/images/brake-failure-while-driving-emergency-towing/bottom.jpg)
*Photo: Pexels*

## Stay Safe

- Do not get out of the car on a live highway lane. Wait for the shoulder or a complete stop in a safe area.
- Do not attempt to drive the car to a nearby gas station or parking lot after a full brake failure, even if it is only a quarter mile away.
- If smoke is coming from a wheel well after the incident, a caliper may have seized and there is heat or fire risk. Get away from the car and call 911. See [Smoke Coming From Under Car Not Hood](/smoke-coming-from-under-car-not-hood-what-does-it-mean/) for what that smoke can mean.
- Keep other people back from the vehicle until it is confirmed stationary and stable.
- At night or in low visibility, stay behind the guardrail or behind a barrier, not between your car and oncoming traffic.

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*Need roadside help? Visit [Tow With The Flow](https://towwiththeflow.com/brake-failure-while-driving-emergency-towing/) for real answers when your car breaks down.*
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