Posted on 3/27/2026
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A coolant leak is one of those problems that can feel manageable right up until it isn’t. The temperature gauge stays normal, the car drives fine, and you tell yourself you’ll handle it soon. The risk is that coolant loss doesn’t always scale politely, and the warning signs can show up late. Here’s how to think about the timing without turning every drive into a gamble. How Coolant Leaks Turn Into Bigger Problems Coolant does more than keep the engine from overheating. It also helps regulate temperature evenly, which matters for everything from heater performance to how hard the cooling fans have to work. When the level drops, the system has less reserve, so small changes in traffic, heat, or hills can push it closer to the edge. A slow leak can seem harmless because it doesn’t leave a puddle. Coolant can evaporate on hot parts or leak only when the system is pressurized, then dry before you ever see it. That’s why the reservoir ... read more