What Road Salt Does to Your Car
Road salt — sodium chloride — is an electrolyte that dramatically accelerates metal corrosion when dissolved in water. Every time you drive on a treated NH road, salt accumulates on your undercarriage, frame rails, wheel wells, brake lines, and lower body panels.
Left untreated, this salt continues reacting with your vehicle's metal surfaces long after you park. The damage is often invisible until it becomes serious — rust on your frame, corroded brake lines, rotting rocker panels. In New Hampshire, salt damage can shave years off a vehicle's safe operating life.
How Often Should You Wash in Winter?
The general guidance from automotive experts is:
- Every 10–14 days at minimum during winter months
- Within 24–48 hours after any significant salt exposure — driving during or right after a storm, or on freshly treated highways
- After every major storm — even if you washed recently
The key is not letting salt sit. The longer it stays on the metal, the more damage it causes. A quick wash within a day or two of heavy exposure removes it before corrosion begins.
Village Car Wash tip: Our self-serve bays and touchless automatic bay are open 24 hours — including during and after winter storms. You don't have to wait for business hours or warm weather. Wash the salt off the same night you get home.
The Most Important Winter Wash Focus — Underbody
A standard exterior wash removes salt from your doors, hood, and roof. But the real damage happens underneath. Your frame, exhaust system, wheel wells, and brake lines accumulate the most salt and are the least visible.
Our touchless automatic bay includes an underbody blast — high-pressure jets specifically aimed at your chassis and wheel wells to flush out salt buildup from below. This is the single most important winter wash feature for NH drivers.
Can You Wash Your Car When It's Below Freezing?
Yes — with some caution. Most car wash operations use heated water which prevents freezing during the wash itself. The main risk is water freezing in door seals, locks, and hinges after the wash. To minimize this:
- Wash during the warmest part of the day when possible
- Drive for several minutes after washing to help evaporate water from seals
- Avoid washing when temperatures are below 20°F — water may freeze before you get home
- Apply a silicone spray to door seals before winter to reduce ice bonding
Winter Membership — The Smart Move for NH Drivers
A Village Car Wash unlimited membership at $22–34/month means you never have to think about the cost of washing after a storm. Pull in, scan the app, wash, done. For NH drivers who take winter seriously, a membership is one of the simplest vehicle protection investments available.
We're Open 24 Hours — Including Winter
Self-serve bays and touchless automatic bay open 24 hours, 7 days a week. Wash after every storm — no appointment needed.
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