Proper headlight adjustment is a necessary safety measure because if they are not aligned right, you won’t get the full visibility while driving at night. Besides, misadjusted headlights don’t illuminate the road directly in front of you, causing blinding the eyes of oncoming drivers instead of shining the roads. So, aiming headlights to the right direction is necessary if you want to keep things safe while driving.
How to adjust headlights? The simple reason is time. Headlights are not meant to be aligned forever, and they slip out even faster if not adjusted every few years. However, a couple of other reasons are in the play too:
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Level the car. To determine improper headlight adjustment, you have to level the car by properly inflating the tires, keeping the fuel tank at least half-full, and having someone sitting in the driver’s seat. Now, park the car on a flat ground facing toward a wall. The distance between the car and the wall should be 10 to 25 feet, with the car lights directed at the wall. Make sure the shocks are level by pushing all the corners of the car up and down a few times.
Measure the lights. Measure the height between the ground and a fixed point on each of the headlamps with a tape measure. Turn on the lights, and use the tape to mark both the horizontal and vertical centerlines of the headlight beams. The centerlines have to be even. If that’s not the case, lower the higher point to the level of the lower one.
Park the car. Now, park the car exactly 25 feet away from the wall.

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Take a test road drive to find out if the aiming headlights have been done properly. You can repeat the process until you can adjust them to the right position.
Adjusting headlights is an easy but often trivial task that takes time to get right. Be patient because every car is different. With some practice and patience, you can learn to do it in a matter of minutes.
How to align headlights yourself in the easiest way? Start doing the alignment at dusk or night. Some vehicles have a bubble vial, like a carpenter’s level, as part of the headlight adjusting setup. This tool will make the job of headlight aiming a lot easier—just make sure your car stand on totally ground level .
Check your vehicle owner’s manual for the location of the headlight to find vertical and horizontal adjusting screws. Note there’s 2 types of screws: adjusting screws and the screws or fasteners that hold the headlights in place. The adjusting screws need to have long shafts; long enough to span the whole vertical or horizontal edges of the headlight buckets.
Find a level surface in front of a garage door or wall with over 25 ft of space. This is because when necessary you can back away from the wall in a later step.
Use the measuring tape, measure 25 ft from the wall and use the tape to mark the 25-ft line. Colored or white chalk also works.
Park the vehicle close to the wall and turn the headlights on at low beam option.
You’ll make three separate markings as below:
Drive back in a straight line so that the vehicle’s front is at the previously marked 25-foot line.
Check to see if headlights’s brightest spots are two inches below and to the right of the marked horizontal and vertical headlight centerlines. If they’re not, turn the vertical or horizontal adjusting screws or both, as much as needed, for proper headlight adjustment.
And well done! You should have a good understand on how to align headlights properly.