You’re driving along, minding your own business, when suddenly: thump, thump, thump. The dreaded flat tyre. Or maybe it’s less dramatic; maybe you’ve just noticed your tread depth is looking a little illegal during a weekend wash. Either way, you now have a choice to make. Do you drag yourself (and your car) to a local garage, or do you get someone to come to you?
The Pros of Garage Fitting
1. Comprehensive Checks
When your car is on a hydraulic lift in a garage, the mechanics can see more than just your tyres. They might spot a leaking shock absorber, worn brake pads, or a rusty exhaust pipe. In a garage setting, you have access to full diagnostic equipment. If you need a full 4-wheel laser alignment (tracking), a garage ramp is often more stable and precise than mobile equipment used on an uneven driveway.
2. Immediate Availability (Sometimes)
If you are already on the road and drive past a tyre depot, you might get lucky with a walk-in appointment. Large chains often hold massive stock on-site. If you have a common tyre size—like a 205/55 R16, which accounts for a huge chunk of the UK market—they probably have it on the shelf right now.
3. Lower “Perceived” Cost
Some drivers believe garages are cheaper because there’s no “call-out fee.” And in some cases, budget garages can undercut mobile fitters on the base price of the tyre itself. But, as we’ll see later, the base price isn’t the only cost.
The Cons of Garage Fitting
1. The Waiting Game
The average time spent at a tyre depot is around 60 to 90 minutes. That’s an hour and a half of your life you aren’t getting back. Plus, you have to get there. If the garage is 20 minutes away, that’s nearly two hours out of your day.
2. Logistics Nightmares
What if your tyre is completely flat? You can’t drive to the garage. You have to put on the spare (if you have one—many modern cars don’t), use a tyre sealant kit (which ruins the tyre for repair), or call a tow truck. Suddenly, a simple tyre change becomes a logistical headache.
3. Upselling Pressure
We’ve all been there. You go in for a £60 tyre and get told you need new brake discs, wiper blades, and an oil change. While sometimes necessary, garages are businesses designed to maximize the value of every car on the lift.
The Pros of Mobile Fitting
1. Unbeatable Convenience
This is the big one. You don’t leave your house. You don’t leave your desk. A van pulls up, the fitter gets the keys, does the job, and leaves. You continue working, watching Netflix, or looking after the kids. For busy professionals or parents, this time saving is worth its weight in gold.
2. Emergency Rescue
If you have a blowout on the motorway or wake up to a flat tyre on a Monday morning, mobile fitting isn’t just a luxury; it’s a rescue service. Data suggests that mobile tyre call-outs have increased by over 20% in the last five years, largely driven by drivers who simply cannot get their vehicle to a garage safely.
3. Cost-Effective (Surprisingly)
There’s a myth that mobile fitting is vastly more expensive. But the gap has narrowed significantly. Many mobile-only businesses have lower overheads than physical garages—no rent for a large unit, no business rates, no reception staff. Often, these savings are passed on. Plus, you save on fuel.
The Cons of Mobile Fitting
1. Space Requirements
The fitter needs space to park their van and work around your car. If you’re parked on a narrow, busy street or a tight underground car park, they might not be able to do the job safely.
2. Weather Dependency
While fitters work in rain or shine, extreme weather can cause delays. A garage is a controlled environment; a driveway in a thunderstorm is not.
3. Limited Equipment
Mobile vans are incredibly well-equipped, but they aren’t factories. If you have a seized locking wheel nut that requires heavy-duty drilling or heat induction to remove, a mobile fitter might struggle where a fully equipped workshop wouldn’t.
The Cost Breakdown: Is Mobile Actually More Expensive?
Let’s talk money. Because that’s what really matters, right?
If you compare the raw price of a tyre online, you might see a garage offering a Premium Bridgestone for £90 and a mobile fitter offering it for £95. But that £5 difference is misleading.
Let’s calculate the “Real Cost”:
Garage Scenario:
- Tyre Cost: £90
- Fitting: Included
- Fuel to get there and back (10 miles): £3.50
- Time lost (1.5 hours @ your hourly wage, say £15/hr): £22.50
- Total Real Cost: £116.00
Mobile Scenario:
- Tyre Cost: £95
- Fitting: Included (often free if buying 2+ tyres)
- Fuel: £0
- Time lost: £0 (You kept working)
- Total Real Cost: £95.00
The result? In real terms, mobile fitting can actually be cheaper when you factor in the value of your time and travel costs. Plus, competitive pressure means many mobile fitters now waive call-out fees entirely if you book a standard slot (non-emergency) in advance.
However, be warned: Emergency mobile fitting is different. If you need someone within the hour because you’re stranded, expect to pay a call-out premium of anywhere from £40 to £100 on top of the tyre price. That is the price of urgency.
Performance and Quality
You might worry that a guy in a van can’t balance a wheel as well as a machine in a depot.
Fact Check: Mobile vans use computerized balancing machines just like garages. The technology has miniaturized. They can balance wheels to the same gram-perfect standard.
However, wheel alignment is a different story. While some advanced mobile vans offer laser alignment, many don’t. Or, if they do, it might be a “front toe” adjustment only, rather than a full 4-wheel geometry check.
So, here is the rule of thumb:
- Just need tyres? Mobile fitting quality is equal to garage fitting.
- Need tyres + tracking + suspension check? A garage is likely the better technical choice.
Who Should Choose What?
Still on the fence? Let’s simplify it based on who you are and what you drive.
Choose Mobile Tyre Fitting If:
- You value your time: If you can’t afford to lose two hours of your day.
- You have a flat tyre at home: It’s safer and cheaper than towing the car.
- You are buying 2 or more tyres: Most mobile fees vanish with multi-tyre orders.
- You drive a standard vehicle: Standard cars, SUVs, and vans are bread and butter for mobile fitters.
Choose Garage Tyre Fitting If:
- You need other mechanical work: Kill two birds with one stone (MOT + Tyres).
- You have specialized needs: e.g., extremely low-profile supercar tyres or classic cars with wire wheels that need specialist care.
- You live in an area with zero parking: If you park on a red route or a single-track lane, a mobile van physically can’t stop there.
- You need immediate, right-now service: If you are driving past a garage, stopping in is faster than waiting for a van to be dispatched.
The Verdict
Mobile tyre fitting isn’t just a gimmick; it’s a viable, cost-effective alternative that saves the one resource you can’t buy more of: time. Statistics show that customer satisfaction rates for mobile fitting services often hover around 95%, largely because the convenience factor is so high.
Hence, if you have a safe place to park and value convenience, mobile is the winner. But, if you need a full vehicle health check or have complex alignment issues, the garage lift remains king.