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Saving Your Rig From Salt and Sand (Mar 2026)

Most car owners make this harder than it needs to be. Here's the straightforward approach that actually works—no fluff, no upselling.

Driving on the beach is a classic Aussie weekend, but the salt will eat your car alive if you aren't careful. Here is how to get that gunk off properly before it turns into rust.

SC
Sarah Chen Interior & Leather Specialist
| Updated: 2 March 2026
Saving Your Rig From Salt and Sand (Mar 2026)

Aussie Conditions

Living near the coast? Salt air corrodes metal and degrades rubber seals. A fortnightly wash underneath is essential, not optional.
Quick Summary

Look, we all love a run up Noosa North Shore or along the coast, but salt spray is basically acid for your paint and chassis. This is a quick run-down for anyone who's just come back from a beach trip and wants to make sure their daily doesn't start rusting by next winter. I've seen too many good 4x4s ruined by a 'quick rinse' that didn't do the job.

01

The Post-Beach Reality Check

Right, so you've had a cracker of a weekend on the sand. Now comes the part everyone hates. I've been detailing for 15 years and I've seen 'beach cars' that look fine on the outside but are literally crumbling underneath. That salt spray from the Pacific gets into every nook and cranny. If you leave it sitting there in the March heat, it just bakes on. Honestly, don't wait until Monday. Get it done as soon as you get home or hit a DIY wash bay on the way back. Your wallet will thank you later.

Flood the Underbody First

Most blokes just spray the wheel arches and call it a day. Huge mistake. You need to get a sprinkler or an underbody wash tool (Bowden's Own makes a decent one) and let it run for 15-20 minutes. I once had a customer bring in a LandCruiser that looked mint, but when we poked the chassis rail, a cup of wet sand fell out. That sand holds the salt against the metal. Flush it until the water runs crystal clear. No shortcuts here.

Use a Dedicated Salt Remover

Plain water is okay, but it doesn't always break the ionic bond salt has with your metal. Use something like Salt-Away or a specific salt-dissolving foam. I reckon it's the only way to be 100% sure you've got it all. I personally use Salt-Off through a foam cannon, chuck it on, let it dwell for 5 minutes (don't let it dry in the sun though!), and then rinse. It's cheap insurance against the 'iron worm'.

Don't Forget the Door Jams and Seals

Salt spray travels. It's not just on the outside. Open your doors, tailgate, and bonnet. Wipe down the rubber seals with a damp microfibre. I've seen plenty of cars where the window tracks started squeaking and scratching because of fine beach sand trapped in the felt. A quick wipe now saves you replacing window motors later. (Learned that lesson the expensive way on my old Hilux!)

The Sneaky Engine Bay Rinse

If you were doing high-speed runs on the sand, salt mist is all over your engine. Give it a very light misting with fresh water once the engine is cool. Don't go nuts with a pressure washer near the electrics, just a gentle rinse to move the salt off the aluminium bits. If you've got exposed metal, a quick spray of Lanotec or fish oil afterward works wonders, though it smells a bit funky for a week.
02

The 'Back From The Beach' Kit

What You'll Need

0/5
Karcher or Pressure Washer — Essential for knocking the heavy sand clumps loose.
Underbody Water Broom — Saves your back and gets right into the middle of the chassis.
Salt Neutralising Solution — Breaks down the salt better than soapy water alone.
Long-handled soft brush — For getting behind the wheels and inside the rim barrels.
A cold beer — For when you're finished. You earned it.

Watch Out

Never, ever use a high-pressure wand directly on your radiator or oil cooler fins to get sand out. You'll bend the fins shut and your car will overheat next time you're stuck in traffic on the M1. Use a garden hose with decent flow instead. Also, don't just go through an automatic car wash, they almost never clean the underbody properly and usually just recycle salty water anyway.
03

Common Questions

Can I just wait until it rains to wash the salt off?
Nah, don't be lazy. Rain doesn't get into the chassis rails where the sand and salt are hiding. It actually makes it worse by keeping the salt damp and active. Give it a proper hose-down.
Should I wax the car before I go to the beach?
Absolutely. A good sacrificial layer of wax or a ceramic sealant makes the sand slide right off when you're cleaning it later. I'd recommend a quick hit of Meguiar's Ceramic Wax before you head off.
How do I get that 'beach smell' out of the carpet?
That's usually damp salt and sand in the fibres. Vacuum it twice, then use a fabric refresher. If it's really bad, you might need to hire a carpet extractor, but usually, a good sun-dry with the doors open (in a safe spot!) does the trick.
04

Wrap Up

Anyway, beach driving is one of the best things about living in Oz, so don't let the cleaning put you off. Just be thorough. Spend the hour now to save yourself a massive headache with rust and seized bolts in two years' time. No dramas, give it a crack this arvo and she'll be right.

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