Summer is peak boating season. The ramps are busier, the roads are hotter, and more new boat owners are towing for the first time. And while towing a boat can feel intimidating – especially if you’ve had a rough experience with a flat tyre or a cooked wheel bearing – it doesn’t have to be something you dread.
With the right preparation, the right gear and a few proven systems, towing quickly becomes second nature. In fact, it becomes part of the adventure. If your boat is packed right, your trailer is healthy and your towing technique is dialled in, you’ll hit the road with confidence and start the day already ahead of the pack.
The following guide blends real-world experience, road safety knowledge and practical steps you can follow every single time you hitch up. Whether you’re towing a 400kg tinny or a three-tonne fibreglass rig, these fundamentals will keep you safer and make your day smoother.

Every seasoned boatie eventually builds a dedicated kit that lives permanently in the car or boat. Not because they love carrying extra gear around, but because they’ve had to learn the hard way – usually on the side of a highway – that trailers have their own personalities and that issues rarely happen close to home
A quality trailer kit ensures you can get yourself moving again if something goes wrong.
The essentials include:
This small kit can be the difference between a ruined weekend and a quick roadside repair. Take the time to practice changing a wheel or swapping a bearing at home – if you can do it in your driveway, you can do it anywhere.

Towing safely begins before the car even moves. Hitching the trailer correctly is the most important step in the entire process because it’s the main point of connection between your car and your boat. A reliable system ensures nothing is rushed and nothing is forgotten.
Here’s a simple, repeatable method:
1. Align the tow ball and hitch
2. Lower the trailer onto the tow ball
3. Attach the safety chains and plug in the electrics
4. Stow the jockey wheel
5. Release the trailer handbrake
By following this method every time, hitching becomes automatic and mistakes become much less likely.



Once the trailer is hitched, your attention shifts to the boat itself. Legally and practically, the boat must be properly secured to the trailer.
Make sure you have:
Think of the boat like any other load on a trailer – if it can move, bounce, or slide, it needs securing. Even small items like tackle boxes, buckets, and rods should be tied down or placed in hatches. A loose esky or rod tip bouncing out can cause major problems on the road.

Every vehicle, trailer, and tow bar has legal towing limits. Understanding them ensures your setup is not only safe, but compliant.
Key numbers to know:
Many people unknowingly exceed their limits without realising. Between full fuel tanks, eskies, batteries, tackle and passengers, weights creep up quickly. If you’re unsure, visit a public weighbridge – they’re inexpensive and give you peace of mind.

Towing changes the way your car behaves. Everything becomes slower – stopping, accelerating, turning, reacting. You’re effectively operating a two-piece vehicle with its own momentum and handling characteristics
Allow extra braking distance
Take corners wider
Accelerate gently
A heavy trailer can sway under sudden throttle. Smooth power delivery keeps everything stable. If sway begins:
Sway can be triggered by crosswinds, uneven loads, incorrect tyre pressure and/or poor weight distribution.

Hot weather and holiday traffic introduce additional challenges.
Plan ahead
Check tyre condition regularly
Trailer tyres degrade faster due to sun exposure and infrequent use. Watch for:
Stay cool
Your car and your trailer work harder in summer. Heat affects hubs, bearings and brakes, especially in traffic. Keep an eye (and nose) out for anything unusual.
At the ramp, do a quick post-drive inspection:

Reversing a trailer intimidates plenty of people but it’s all about practice, not talent.
Try practicing in an empty carpark:
The more you practice in a no-pressure environment, the easier it becomes at a busy summer ramp.

With the right systems, towing doesn’t have to be stressful, rushed, or intimidating. It becomes a simple, repeatable process: prepare your gear, follow your hitching steps, drive smart, and do your checks.
Once you build those habits, towing becomes the first chapter of the adventure – not the challenge before it.