Long winters, salted highways, slushy commutes, and wide temperature swings create the perfect environment for one of your vehicle’s worst enemies: rust.
Rust may start small but can erode your investment, compromising structural components and electrical systems. Rust and corrosion treatments address this issue by maintaining your vehicle’s safety, longevity, and resale value.
Below, we break down exactly how rust starts, what treatments do, and why investing in corrosion protection is one of the smartest decisions you can make for your vehicle.
Rust is simply iron oxide, a chemical reaction between iron or steel, oxygen, and moisture. Add road salt (a powerful catalyst), and the oxidation process speeds up dramatically. In Canada, rust can start forming in as little as a few days after exposure to winter roads.
The most common causes include:
In other words: even the most careful drivers can’t avoid the elements that cause rust.
Rust treatments are designed to prevent, inhibit, or slow down the oxidation process. Modern products work in three main ways:
Creating a Moisture-Blocking Barrier
Sprayed-on rust inhibitors or oil-based treatments form a protective coating that stops water and salt from reaching metal surfaces. Rustproofing is especially important for the undercarriage, wheel wells, brake lines, and frame rails—all of which are constantly exposed.
These barriers:
Some treatments use rust converters, chemicals that turn iron oxide into a stable compound. This prevents corrosion and allows for re priming or coating.
Rust converters:
Vehicles have countless pockets where moisture becomes trapped: inside doors, rockers, hood seams, trunk panels, and cross-members. Cavity waxes and penetrating sprays prevent corrosion in tight, unseen spaces that drivers often overlook.
These products:
Your vehicle’s undercarriage faces constant exposure to water, gravel, salt, and road debris. Key components at risk include:
Many critical failures begin from underneath. Rust treatments aggressively target this area because neglecting it can lead to major safety issues.
There are two main types of corrosion protection:
This type of treatment is best for older vehicles, vehicles driven through winter, or cars with early-stage rust.
This treatment is best for newer vehicles or as part of a long-term protection plan.
A technician may also recommend a hybrid approach depending on your vehicle’s age and condition.
Many drivers believe new vehicles come off the line rust-proofed. In reality, factory coatings are thin and primarily designed to survive transport and showroom exposure, not years of harsh Canadian winters.
After just one or two salty seasons, unprotected areas begin to show early signs of corrosion. Applying a proper rust treatment early provides:
Think of it as immunizing your vehicle against corrosion.
You can protect a vehicle at any age, but the best timing is:
For vehicles already showing rust, early intervention prevents costly structural repairs later.
Small Investment, Major Protection
Rust and corrosion treatments effectively extend your vehicle’s lifespan. They protect structural integrity, preserve the undercarriage, and reduce expensive future repairs. Proactive rust protection keeps your vehicle investment strong year-round.
Visit your local NAPA AUTOPRO service centre to learn more about rustproofing options suitable for your vehicle.