Towing uphill and downhill presents unique challenges compared to flat highway towing. The moment the road starts climbing or descending, everything changes — your engine works harder, your brakes generate more heat, and the risks multiply. Whether you’re crossing mountain passes or heading into river bottoms, here’s how to handle grades safely with a trailer in tow.
Going Uphill with a Trailer
Choose the Right Gear Before the Grade
Don’t wait until you’re already struggling to downshift. Watch your route and downshift proactively before you reach a steep climb. If your vehicle has a tow/haul mode, activate it — it raises the transmission’s shift points so your engine stays in its peak power range longer instead of hunting up and down between gears.
Maintain Momentum
Speed is your friend on an uphill. A running start into a grade — within legal and safe limits — helps you maintain momentum when the grade slows you down. Don’t floor the accelerator in a high gear; rather, use a lower gear that lets your engine run near its torque peak while climbing.
Watch Your Transmission Temperature
Automatic transmissions generate enormous heat towing on long grades. If your vehicle has a transmission temperature gauge or warning light, monitor it closely. If the temp climbs into the red or warning zone, pull over in a safe spot, shift to park (not neutral — let the converter lock up and allow the pump to circulate cooler fluid), and let the truck idle to cool down before continuing.
Slow Vehicles and Runaway Lanes
On grades with significant truck traffic, you may encounter designated slow vehicle lanes or climbing lanes. Use them if your rig is slowing significantly — it’s courteous, legal in most states, and prevents dangerous bunching of faster traffic behind you. If you see a runaway truck ramp on a downhill, know where it is before you need it.
Going Downhill with a Trailer
Downhills are where most serious towing accidents happen. A loaded trailer pushes your tow vehicle from behind, dramatically increasing stopping distances and amplifying any instability. The key principle: arrive at the top of a hill already in the gear you’ll use going down, and stay slow enough that you never need to brake hard.
Use Engine Braking — Not Your Foot Brake
Engine braking is your best friend on long descents. Downshift to a lower gear before the descent begins so your engine’s compression and pumping losses slow the rig without ever touching the brake pedal. Tow/haul mode on automatic transmissions helps by holding lower gears and applying moderate braking when you lift off the throttle.
For manual transmissions, select a gear appropriate for the grade before you start down. A good rule of thumb: use the same gear going down that you’d use going up.
Avoid Brake Fade
Brake fade occurs when your brakes overheat from sustained use. The brake pads and rotors lose their friction coefficient, and your stopping power disappears — sometimes entirely. This is a deadly scenario with a heavy trailer pushing you from behind.
Signs of brake fade: the pedal feels mushy or spongy, you smell burning from the wheels, or you have to press much harder than normal to slow down. If you notice any of these signs, pull over immediately and allow the brakes to cool completely before continuing. Do not drive on faded brakes hoping they’ll come back — they may not before you need them.
The prevention is simple: use engine braking and only apply the service brakes in short, firm applications (“snubbing”) to trim speed, then release — rather than riding them constantly.
Use Trailer Brakes on Downhills
If your trailer has electric brakes, engage the manual override slider on your brake controller to apply a small amount of trailer braking before and during descents. This shares the braking load between the truck and trailer, dramatically reducing heat on the tow vehicle’s brakes. Properly adjusted trailer brakes also help prevent the trailer from pushing the truck into sway.
Sway on Downhills
Trailer sway is more likely on a downhill because the trailer’s mass is pushing from behind. If sway develops:
- Do not brake suddenly — this can worsen sway.
- Do not counter-steer aggressively.
- Firmly hold the steering wheel straight and let off the accelerator gradually to slow down.
- Apply the trailer brakes manually via your brake controller to help pull the trailer straight.
- Allow the speed to bleed off until the sway dampens.
Speed Limits on Grades
Many mountain passes and steep grades have posted reduced speed limits for vehicles towing trailers. These limits exist because the physics are unforgiving — even if you feel in control, an emergency stop on a steep grade with a fully loaded trailer may be beyond your vehicle’s capability at higher speeds. Respect posted limits and dial back further if conditions call for it.
Planning Your Route
Before any trip with significant grades, review your route for the steepest sections. Free tools like Google Maps terrain view and dedicated trucker GPS apps will show you grade percentages. Grades over 6% deserve extra caution; grades over 8% should be approached with a solid plan. Some routes have mandatory truck pull-offs with brake-check areas before long descents — use them. The Federal Highway Administration’s road weather management guide also covers grade-specific challenges for drivers hauling heavy loads.
Related: Towing in Bad Weather and Trailer Sway Control — two more situations where preparation and technique make all the difference.