Tire Rotation in Ormond Beach, FL averages $20.00, with prices ranging from $19.95 to $19.99 based on 5 verified prices from 5 local shops.
Prices verified from 5 Ormond Beach shops · June 2026
Tire Rotation prices in Ormond Beach, FL range from $19.95 to $19.99 at local auto repair shops, based on verified pricing data gathered from 5 shops across the area. A tire rotation moves each tire to a different wheel position following a pattern based on your drivetrain and tire type. Prices for this service in Ormond Beach vary by vehicle make and model, the grade of parts and fluids used, and whether you book with an independent shop, a franchise chain, or a dealership. Independent and chain repair shops in Ormond Beach typically charge 20 to 40 percent less than dealerships for this service; dealerships may justify the premium for warranty-covered work or brand-specific diagnostics. All prices listed on this page were verified directly from shop websites or user-submitted receipts, and each carries a Last Verified date. For details on how PriceMyFix verifies prices, visit pricemyfix.com/about/methodology.
| Shop | Type | Price | Details | Verified | Distance | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boulevard Tire center330 West Granada Boulevard | Independent | $19.99 | Last verified 45 days agoby PriceMyFix | 0.7 mi | View Shop | |
| T & D Auto Repair268 Hand Avenue | Independent | $19.95Coupon | Verified 3 weeks agoby PriceMyFix | 1.0 mi | View Shop | |
| Evans Auto Sales North1089 South Nova Road | Dealership | $19.95Coupon | Verified 2 weeks agoby PriceMyFix | 2.4 mi | View Shop | |
| Dean's Auto Outlet1090 South Nova Road | Dealership | $19.95Coupon | Last verified 41 days agoby PriceMyFix | 2.4 mi | View Shop | |
| Karl's Advanced Automotive Repair Inc.1340 Ocean Shore Boulevard | Independent | $19.99Coupon | Verified 14 days agoby PriceMyFix | 2.7 mi | View Shop |
The average tire rotation in Ormond Beach, FL costs $19.97 across 5 shops. The cheapest verified price is $19.95 at T & D Auto Repair.
Trucks and SUVs with higher oil capacity may cost more. Check individual shop listings for vehicle-specific pricing.
A tire rotation moves each tire to a different wheel position following a pattern based on your drivetrain and tire type. On front-wheel-drive vehicles, the standard is an X-pattern or forward-cross: front tires move straight to rear, rears cross to front. The goal is to equalize wear across all four tires — front tires on FWD cars handle steering and acceleration, so they wear 2–3× faster than rears without rotation. Rotation extends tire life 20–30% and is required to maintain most tire manufacturer warranties.
Every 5,000–7,500 miles, or at every other oil change. Some manufacturers specify 7,500 miles. Aggressive drivers, those with performance tires, and drivers with mismatched tread depth across axles should rotate at the shorter interval. Never skip the first rotation — tires begin developing uneven wear patterns from the very first mile, and catching it early is much easier than correcting advanced feathering or cupping.
Skipping rotation is not immediately dangerous but becomes expensive over 12–18 months. On FWD vehicles, front tires typically wear out 15,000–20,000 miles before rears. Without rotation, you'll replace tires in staggered pairs — paying more per tire (no full-set pricing) and potentially running mismatched wear ratings or even different brands front-to-rear. Mismatched wear contributes to handling imbalance. At 30% wear differential front-to-rear, hydroplaning risk on wet pavement increases measurably — most noticeable in heavy rain.
Rotation is straightforward but a few shops cut corners: (1) not checking torque — wheel bolts must be torqued to spec (typically 80–120 ft-lb depending on vehicle) or you risk wheel wobble; ask if they use a torque wrench or just impact gun, (2) shops that 'rotate' but don't move the spare into rotation when your manual calls for it (many truck manuals include the full-size spare in a 5-tire rotation pattern), (3) using a rotation to check tire pressure without correcting to spec — they're looking at your tires; there's no excuse not to set the correct pressure while they're already off.
All prices verified from public sources and user submissions. Learn about our verification methodology.