Tire Pressure Warning Light On? How To Deal With The Emergency

June 3, 2026
Tire Pressure Warning Light On? How To Deal With The Emergency

The tire pressure light is one of the most common dashboard warnings drivers encounter, and it can appear suddenly, even on late-model vehicles from the 2026 Toyota Camry to the 2026 Ford F-350. When that yellow symbol lights up, it’s easy to feel unsure whether it’s a minor issue or something more serious.

In this article, we walk you through exactly what the tire pressure light means, whether it’s safe to keep driving, what to do if the light is flashing, and the essential tools to keep in your car for unforeseen circumstances. Here are the best quick and practical steps to keep you safe on the road in a tire pressure emergency.

Tire pressures should always be set to the manufacturer’s specific pressure recommendation. This setting is on a placard placed in the driver’s door jamb of the vehicle. For the most accurate readings and settings, always check and set pressures when the tires are cold.

Tire Pressure Light On: What Do I Do Right Now?

Get Out And Look

Credit: Christopher Smith / CarBuzz / Valnet

Low Tire Pressure Light Quick Reference

Light Behavior

Steady / Solid

Flashing

Comes On, Goes Off

What It Means

Tire pressure is low

TPMS system fault, pressure may be unaffected.

Temporary low pressure, or sensor glitch

Severity

Moderate

High

Low-moderate

What To Do

Check all tires with a gauge, add air when the tire is cold.

Stop safely, check all tire pressures, get the system diagnosed.

Monitor for a few days, recheck pressures

Common Causes

Normal air loss, cold weather, small leak

Faulty sensor, dead sensor battery, wiring issues.

Temperature changes, recent tire work

Although there are many lights on the dashboard, the low tire pressure light is especially concerning. Seeing the low tire pressure symbol illuminate can induce panic as it comes with some mystery at the initial onset. Unfortunately, the low tire light does not distinguish a completely flat tire from a tire that is just a few psi (pounds per square inch) low. So, if the car’s steering feels near identical to how it usually does, or if the car/truck doesn’t seem to be listing to one side or the other, there’s a good chance that the tire is just a few psi low and the car is giving you a tire pressure warning.

Indirect TPMS animation Credit: Indirect TPMS animation (Source: MotoLogic)

Many vehicles are equipped with a tire pressure monitor within the driver-information display. This enables the driver to see a live read on individual tire pressures. The best thing to do when the low tire light illuminates is reference this interface, and get a read on which tire is low. Regardless of how low the tire pressure is reading, it is highly advisable to find a safe area to pull over and inspect the tire. If the tire is completely flat, you’ll need to pull over anyway. However, if the tire is low and not flat, you may have a slow leak, and even some slow leaks can be dangerous to drive on.

Can I Keep Driving With A Tire Pressure Light On?

The Steadily Lit Low Tire Light

Toyota Camry on a Flatbed Tow Truck Credit: Top Dogz Towing

A steadily-lit low tire pressure warning light typically means one or more tires has dropped below the recommended pressure threshold detected by the TPMS sensors. The severity of the low pressure situation needs to be determined. Obviously, if the tire is completely flat, it’s also likely heavily damaged, mystery solved. However, with some leaks, it’s not always that simple. It’s not uncommon for tires to lose pressure over time for various reasons. Torn valve stems, small punctures, and bead leaks are all very common sources of other slow tire leaks. Even cold temperatures will cause a tire to lose its air.

According to Ideal Gas Law, when the temperature of a gas decreases, its pressure decreases if the volume stays the same. So, for every 10-degree drop in temperature, a tire’s pressure typically drops 1–2 psi. This is a common occurrence that many drivers expect in the cold winter months, and it will certainly trip the low tire pressure light.

Many tire pressure sensors trigger at around 25% below the manufacturers recommended cold tire pressure setting. Although there is no universal safe minimum tire pressure, a common guideline used by many safety experts is that tires above 25–28 psi are generally safe to drive on for short distances at reduced speeds. Below this range, the risk of tire damage, poor handling, and blowouts increases significantly.

Read the full article on CarBuzz

This article originally appeared on CarBuzz and is republished here with permission.

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