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Saving Your Rig From Salt: Post-Beach Care Tips

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 sand is a bloody ripple, but the salt will eat your chassis alive if you don't act fast. Here is how to get the grit out and stop the rust before it starts.

SC
Sarah Chen Interior & Leather Specialist
| Updated: 4 March 2026
Saving Your Rig From Salt: Post-Beach Care Tips

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've all done it, spent a cracking weekend at Fraser or Robe only to come home and park the car in the driveway while we have a beer. Big mistake. This is for the blokes and ladies who love the coast but don't want their 79 Series or Hilux looking like a block of Swiss cheese in three years. I'll show you the quick way to get that salt and sand off properly.

01

The Silent Killer

Look, I’ve seen some absolute horror stories in my 15 years doing this. A bloke once brought me a three-year-old Ranger that had spent every second weekend at Noosa North Shore. He thought he was doing the right thing by hitting it with the hose for five minutes at the servo on the way home. Truth is, he was just pushing the salt deeper into the nooks and crannies. By the time I saw it, the chassis rails were already flaking. Salt is a nightmare, especially with our Aussie UV beating down on it, so you've gotta be clinical about how you get rid of it.

Don't just use water

A lot of people reckon a quick spray with the hose is enough. It's not. Salt is sticky stuff. I always use a dedicated salt neutraliser, something like Bowden’s Own Salt Wash or even Salt-Away if you've been in the heavy surf. These products actually break the bond between the salt and your metal. Without it, you're just wetting the salt, which can actually make the corrosion process start faster. Give it a crack, your chassis will thank you.

The Sprinkler Trick

I learned this one from an old timer years ago. If you can't get under the car properly, chuck a lawn sprinkler under there. Start at the front and move it back every ten minutes. It’s not a 100% solution, but it gets into the spots you'll miss while you're busy cleaning the interior or having a yarn with the neighbour. (Just don't do it if there's a water restriction on, I'm not paying your fine!)

Flush the frame rails

This is where most people mess up. Modern 4x4 frames have heaps of holes in them. Sand gets in there, holds moisture and salt, and rots the rail from the inside out. Stick your hose right into those drainage holes until the water coming out runs clear. I once spent 20 minutes flushing a Pajero and honestly, I reckon about 5 kilos of K’gari sand came out of the rear crossmember. Don't skip this.

Watch the heat

In March, the Aussie sun is still a killer. Never wash your car when the panels are hot to the touch. If you spray cold water and soap on a black bonnet that’s been sitting in 35-degree heat, it’ll dry instantly and leave nasty spots. Move it into the shade or wait for the arvo when it cools down. To be honest, I prefer doing the underbody first while the panels cool down.
02

Your Beach Wash Kit

What You'll Need

0/5
Salt Neutralising Wash — Bowden's or Meguiar's make great ones.
Pressure Washer — Essential for getting into the wheel arches.
Underbody Water Broom — A total game changer for about $60-80.
Soft Interior Brush — For getting sand out of the seat stitching.
Degreaser — For the oily bits where sand likes to stick.

Watch Out

Do not go through those automatic 'touchless' car washes with the underbody spray and think the job is done. They're alright for a light dust, but they never have the pressure or the reach to get the salt out of the tight spots. Also, never, and I mean never, use a stiff brush on your paint to get sand off. You'll scratch the clear coat faster than a cat on a screen door. Use plenty of water to lubricate everything first.
03

Common Questions

How soon do I need to wash it?
Ideally, the same day you get off the sand. If you leave it for a week, that salt is already starting to react with the metal, especially in our humid coastal areas. If you're staying at the beach for a week, at least give the underbody a quick blast at a servo bay every couple of days.
Should I wax the car before I go?
Abso-bloody-lutely. A good quality wax or a ceramic coating (I'm a big fan of Gtechniq) acts as a sacrificial layer. The salt sticks to the wax, not your paint. It makes the cleanup ten times easier when you get home.
Is red dust worse than salt?
Tough one. Salt causes rust, but that fine red outback dust is abrasive and gets into everything, electronics, air filters, you name it. If you've done a trip that's beach AND red dirt, you've got your work cut out for you. Blow the dust out with compressed air BEFORE you get it wet, otherwise you just make mud.

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