Control Arm Replacement
Chassis blueprint for confirming worn control arm bushings, ball joints, and alignment impact before quoting replacement.
Load Vehicle (Optional)
Optional context for estimator handoff.
Common Symptoms
- Clunk over bumps or during braking
- Loose steering feel, wandering, or pull
- Uneven tire wear or alignment that will not hold
- Visible bushing separation or ball joint play
Inspect First
- Bushing cracks, separation, fluid leakage, or metal-to-metal contact
- Ball joint play and boot condition
- Sway bar links, struts, tie rods, and wheel bearing play
- Subframe, mounting bolts, and corrosion around the arm
Related System Checks
Common Causes
- Worn control arm bushing
- Loose or failed ball joint integrated into the arm
- Bent control arm after impact
- Seized hardware or subframe corrosion complicating access
Labor Time
Typical labor range based on TorqueMech service data.
Repair Difficulty
Normal shop tooling plus access and verification checks.
Inspection Priority
- Confirm the symptom, code, or inspection evidence before replacement.
- Check related systems when the failure pattern is not isolated.
What This Repair Usually Involves
- Confirm the noisy or loose corner with the suspension unloaded and loaded where appropriate.
- Support the vehicle, remove wheel and related fasteners, then remove the control arm.
- Install the new arm without final bushing torque until the suspension is at ride height when required.
- Recommend alignment and road test for pull, clunk, and steering centering.
Diagnostic Context
Control arm estimates should follow a loaded suspension inspection and a plan for alignment after geometry changes.
See what problems often lead to this repair
Use code and diagnostic lookup when needed
Common Mistakes
- Skipping alignment after changing suspension geometry
- Tightening rubber bushings at full droop when ride-height torque is required
- Missing seized cam bolts or damaged mounting pockets
- Blaming the arm before checking links, struts, tie rods, and hub play
Commonly Checked With
Add only when inspection supports it.
Estimate Guidance
- Include alignment recommendation when the arm affects suspension geometry.
- Mention seized hardware possibility on rust-belt or high-mileage vehicles.
- Add ball joint, sway link, or tie rod only when inspection supports it.
- Quote both sides only when wear pattern or alignment evidence supports a paired repair.
Estimate This Repair
Price it once the repair path is confirmed.
Estimate Control Arm Replacement -> Continue EstimateFinal access varies by vehicle and condition.