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Do 4-post lifts need to be bolted down Close-up of 4-post lift base plate with anchor bolt on concrete.

Do I Need to Bolt Down My 4-Post Lift? (Securing Lifts for Safety)

Many first-time lift owners ask: do 4-post car lifts need to be bolted down? It’s a fair question – anchoring a lift sounds intimidating, and you might picture drilling into your garage floor. In reality, 4 post lift bolting requirements depend on how you use the lift and the environment. The good news is most home garage 4-post lifts are designed to stand securely free-standing (without bolts).

In this post, we’ll clarify when you should anchor your 4-post lift, when it’s optional, and the safety factors behind each choice. By the end, you’ll know exactly how to keep your lift (and vehicles) stable and safe – whether bolted down or not.


Do 4-Post Lifts Require Bolting?

A lot of home-style 4-post lifts are engineered to run safely freestanding on a solid, level concrete slab. The wide stance and four columns distribute load well, so for storage and light service, anchors usually aren’t required.

  • Bolt it if: you’re in a commercial bay with high daily cycles, you’re in a seismic area, you’ll use bridge jacks a lot (wheels-off work), or you’re lifting tall/near-capacity trucks and SUVs.

  • Bolt it if: your slab needs shims at multiple corners, has hairline cracks, or space is tight and you want extra insurance against bump-induced creep.

If your garage has a sound ~4" / ~3000-PSI slab and you’re mostly stacking cars or doing oil changes, a freestanding setup is typically fine. Many models even accept caster kits so you can reposition the lift (unloaded) as your layout evolves.

  • Freestanding is great for: home storage, light maintenance, and flexible layouts you may rearrange.

  • Freestanding cautions: always lower onto the mechanical locks before working, chock wheels, and confirm all four footplates share the load evenly.

Regardless of anchoring, good setup matters. Level the posts, shim correctly, and verify lock engagement at multiple heights. These basics do more for safety than anchors alone.

  • Always do: a shake check a few inches up, then lower onto the locks; keep runways clean and dry; re-torque critical hardware after initial use.

  • With bridge jacks: lock the lift on its teeth before raising an axle; never roll the lift on casters while loaded.

👉 Learn more about how bridge jacks integrate with 4-post lifts in our Bridge Jacks Collection.

If you choose to anchor, follow the manual to the letter—right anchors, embedment, edge distances, and torque. Clean the drilled holes, use a carbide bit, and re-torque after a week of cycles.

  • Don’t anchor into: thin, spalled, or jointed concrete—pour proper footings first if needed.

  • Do anchor for: code/insurance needs, extra rigidity, or simply peace of mind in demanding use.

Bottom line: most home installs can run freestanding on a good slab; heavier, inspected, or seismic scenarios favor anchoring. If you want, share your slab thickness/condition, vehicle types, and usage, and I’ll give you a quick bolt/no-bolt recommendation.

4-post lift bolt or not infographic showing freestanding vs anchored setups with safety guidelines

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