If you’ve ever been white-knuckling the wheel as a crosswind tries to shove your overland rig off the highway, you’re not alone. Gusty conditions can make any drive feel like a wrestling match – and the bigger your vehicle (rooftop tent, lifted suspension, gear piled high, even a Sprinter van), the more wind acts like a bully trying to push you around. But there’s a simple suspension tweak that can make a big difference: setting your shocks to firm.
Here’s why it works – and why you should be adjusting your suspension with the weather, not just the terrain.
The Problem: Crosswind sway
High winds act like an invisible side-force against your vehicle. This creates sway, especially if your suspension is soft. That sway causes:
- Body roll
- Delayed steering response
- Fatigue from constant steering corrections
Worse yet, if you’re towing or carrying a roof load, the vehicle can “sail” even more, shifting momentum unpredictably.
The Solution: Firm up those shocks
If your shocks are adjustable (like those from ICON, FOX, or King), turning the dial toward firmer damping limits how quickly your suspension moves. That means:
- Less body roll
- Faster recovery after wind gusts
- Improved high-speed stability
You’re essentially telling the suspension: “Hey, stop bouncing around and hold it together.”



Real World Example
Let’s say you’re driving across the Mojave or Wyoming – flat, open, windy as heck. You’re running mid-stiffness settings from your last trail outing. As the wind pushes you sideways, your rig leans slightly, suspension compresses on one side, then rebounds. And, just as you correct, a new gust hits.
Now imagine you’ve clicked your shocks to full firm. The rig stays flatter. It resists the push. The steering feels tighter. That fatigue? Dramatically reduced.
When to Adjust Back
Once you’re back on slower, off-camber trails, dial your shocks back to a softer setting to regain articulation and ride comfort. Suspension tuning is situational, not set-it-and-forget-it.
Pro Tip
Combine firm shock settings with:
- Slightly higher tire pressure for sidewall stiffness
- Redistributed weight (lower center of gravity)
- Roof load minimization when possible
The result: a stable, safer, and more comfortable drive, no matter what Mother Nature throws your way.
Next time the wind kicks up, don’t just grip the wheel harder. Dial in your shocks and let your suspension do its job.