Safety note: Troubleshooting guidance can help you narrow down likely causes, but it cannot replace an in-person inspection. If the vehicle feels unsafe, warning lights are flashing, you smell fuel, see smoke, notice overheating, or have problems with braking, steering, or control, stop driving when it is safe to do so and have the vehicle inspected.
If one windshield wiper is not moving while the other one still works, the problem is usually in the wiper arm, linkage, or pivot for that side. This is different from a total wiper failure, where you would look first at the fuse, switch, or motor power supply.
In real-world cases, the pattern matters a lot. A wiper that stays parked often points to a stripped arm or loose retaining nut. A wiper that starts to move, then slips, droops, or stops mid-sweep more often points to a worn linkage bushing or a binding pivot.
Some causes are minor and inexpensive. Others can overload the wiper motor, leave you with poor visibility in rain, or lead to both wipers failing if the mechanism jams. The goal is to narrow it down by what the dead wiper does, when it quit, and whether anything changed after snow, ice, or recent service.
VehicleRuns Quick Diagnosis
One Wiper Not Moving
Start with what the stuck wiper actually does. A wiper that stays parked, slips on the glass, or feels jammed by hand usually points to a different first check.
| What you notice | Most likely cause | What to check first | Urgency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other wiper works, dead one stays parked | Loose or stripped wiper arm | Check the arm retaining nut and splines at the pivot | Diagnose soon |
| Dead wiper droops or stops mid-sweep | Broken linkage bushing | Remove the cowl and inspect the linkage connection on that side | Can worsen |
| Wiper stopped after snow or ice | Slipped arm or bent linkage | Inspect for stripped splines, bent arms, or binding movement | Can worsen |
| One pivot feels stiff or seized | Seized wiper pivot | Disconnect linkage and check pivot movement by hand | Can worsen |
| Both slow down, then one quits | Binding linkage overloading motor | Inspect the full linkage for binding before running wipers again | Stop driving |
Best first move: Check the failed side at the wiper arm first, then move under the cowl to the linkage and pivot if the arm is still tight.
Safety note: If visibility is poor, the wiper is binding, or the motor sounds strained, avoid driving until the wiper system can clear the windshield safely.
Most Common Causes of One Wiper Not Moving
Most one-sided wiper failures come down to a handful of mechanical faults on the dead side. The three most common causes are below, and a fuller list of possible causes appears later in the article.
- Loose or Stripped Wiper Arm: If the arm nut loosens or the splines strip, the pivot shaft may turn but the wiper arm will not sweep the glass normally.
- Broken Wiper Linkage Bushing: A worn or popped-off linkage joint can disconnect one side of the wiper transmission so one wiper works while the other stops.
- Seized Wiper Pivot: When the pivot shaft binds from corrosion or wear, that side may drag badly or stop moving altogether and can overload the motor.
What One Wiper Not Moving Usually Means
When only one wiper stops moving, the problem is usually not the switch and usually not a simple fuse. The reason is that both wipers are normally driven by the same motor through a shared linkage. If one still works, the fault is often downstream of the motor on the failed side.
The most useful split is whether the dead wiper is completely still, moves loosely by hand, or feels jammed. A completely still wiper with the other side still sweeping often means the arm is no longer gripping the pivot splines. A loose or drooping wiper can mean the linkage joint has separated. A stiff wiper that resists movement points more toward a seized pivot.
It also matters whether the problem started suddenly after ice, packed snow, or someone lifting the wiper arms. Frozen blades can force the arm to slip on its splines or damage the linkage. A mechanism that has been getting slower for a while before one side quits often points to binding in the pivot or transmission assembly.
If the motor sounds strained, the working wiper slows down, or the system stops in odd positions, think beyond the arm itself. At that point, the linkage may be binding or the motor may be getting overloaded by a seized component.
Possible Causes of One Wiper Not Moving
Loose or Stripped Wiper Arm
The wiper arm clamps onto a splined pivot shaft. If the retaining nut loosens or the splines wear out, the shaft can rotate without driving the arm correctly. That leaves one wiper parked, slipping, or moving only part of the time while the other side still works.
Symptoms to Watch For
- Dead wiper stays near the parked position
- Pivot shaft moves but the arm does not
- Wiper can be repositioned by hand too easily
- Problem started after ice buildup or someone forcing the arm
Moderate Severity
The fault may be simple, but you lose proper wiping on one side and continued slipping can damage the arm further.
How to Confirm: Lift the hood-side cowl area enough to watch the pivot while the wipers are turned on.
Typical fix: Tighten or replace the wiper arm and secure it to a good splined pivot shaft.
Broken Wiper Linkage Bushing
Most wiper transmissions use ball-and-socket style joints or bushings in the linkage. When one of those joints wears out or pops off, the motor can still move part of the linkage and one wiper may keep working while the other stops or moves erratically.
Symptoms to Watch For
- One wiper works normally and the other does nothing
- Dead wiper may flop or stop mid-sweep
- Clicking or popping from under the cowl
- Failure happened suddenly during normal use
Moderate to High Severity
A failed linkage can leave you without enough windshield coverage and can progress into a complete wiper loss.
How to Confirm: Remove the cowl panel and run the wipers briefly while observing the linkage.
Typical fix: Replace the failed linkage bushing or the complete wiper transmission assembly.
Seized Wiper Pivot
Each wiper arm rotates on a pivot shaft that passes through the cowl area. If that pivot corrodes or dries out internally, it can become hard to turn. One side may slow down, stop, or overload the linkage while the other side still tries to move.
Symptoms to Watch For
- Wiper was slowing before it quit
- Working wiper also seems slower than normal
- Motor sounds strained or labored
- Failed side is hard to move even with the arm removed
Moderate to High Severity
A seized pivot can burn out the motor or damage the linkage if the system keeps being forced to run.
How to Confirm: With the arm removed and linkage disconnected, rotate the suspect pivot by hand.
Typical fix: Replace the seized pivot or the complete wiper transmission assembly, and service related hardware as needed.
Bent or Damaged Wiper Linkage
Ice load, snow, or an impact to the arm can bend a linkage rod or transmission bracket. Once geometry changes, one wiper may bind, sweep incorrectly, hit the cowl, or stop moving while the other side continues.
Symptoms to Watch For
- Problem started right after heavy snow or frozen blades
- Wiper parks in the wrong place
- Arm travel looks shorter than normal
- Linkage moves but binds partway through the sweep
Moderate Severity
It may still move intermittently, but a bent linkage can jam the system and leave you without dependable wiping.
How to Confirm: Inspect the linkage under the cowl and compare both sides through a full hand-moved sweep with the motor off.
Typical fix: Replace the bent linkage or damaged transmission assembly and reset arm alignment.
Failing Wiper Motor or Park Mechanism
A motor problem is less likely when only one wiper is dead, but it can still contribute if the motor crank or park mechanism develops play and no longer drives the linkage correctly under load. This is more likely when both wipers have been slow or inconsistent before one side stops.
Symptoms to Watch For
- Both wipers were slow before the failure
- Motor hums but movement is weak
- Wipers stop in odd parked positions
- Linkage is intact but drive motion is inconsistent
Moderate to High Severity
A weak motor can turn into total wiper failure, especially in rain or when the windshield has more drag than usual.
How to Confirm: After confirming the arm, linkage, and pivots are intact, observe the motor crank with the linkage attached and detached.
Typical fix: Replace the wiper motor or motor-and-transmission assembly and set the park position correctly.
Debris, Ice, or Cowl Interference
Packed leaves, broken plastic cowl pieces, or ice can block one arm or load one side of the mechanism much more than the other. In some cases the obstruction causes the arm to slip or the linkage to disconnect rather than permanently damaging the system right away.
Symptoms to Watch For
- Failure happened during freezing weather
- Wiper was trying to move but chattering or hopping
- Visible ice or debris near the arm base
- Problem improved slightly after thawing
Low Severity
The obstruction itself may be minor, but repeated use can quickly turn it into a linkage or arm failure.
How to Confirm: Inspect the windshield edge, cowl, arm path, and linkage area for packed debris or ice.
Typical fix: Clear the obstruction, thaw the mechanism fully, and replace any arm or linkage parts damaged by the overload.
How to Diagnose the Problem
- Note exactly what the failed wiper does: stays parked, droops, slips, stops mid-sweep, or binds.
- Check whether the problem started after snow, ice, a car wash, windshield service, or someone lifting the wiper arms.
- Inspect the dead-side wiper arm at the pivot. Look for a loose retaining nut, stripped splines, or an arm sitting in the wrong position.
- With the wipers off, carefully move the suspect arm by hand and compare how it feels to the working side. Excessive looseness suggests an arm problem. Heavy resistance suggests a seized pivot or bent linkage.
- Remove the cowl panel and watch the linkage while the wipers run briefly. Look for a disconnected bushing, bent rod, or a pivot that is not following normally.
- Disconnect the linkage from the suspect pivot if needed and check the pivot shaft for smooth movement by hand.
- If the linkage and pivot are intact, watch the motor crank for smooth, full travel and listen for strain or stalling under load.
- Reassemble and align the wiper arms correctly after any repair so both sides park in the proper position and clear the glass evenly.
Can You Keep Driving If One Wiper Is Not Moving?
Important: The guidance below is general and cannot confirm that your specific vehicle is safe to drive. If a symptom affects braking, steering, handling, fuel, overheating, smoke, visibility, or vehicle control, treat it as potentially serious and have the vehicle inspected before continued driving when appropriate. For more context, see our Automotive Safety Disclaimer.
Whether you can keep driving depends less on the mechanical fault itself and more on weather and visibility. A one-sided wiper failure may be manageable in dry weather, but it becomes a safety issue fast in rain, snow, road spray, or darkness.
Okay to Keep Driving for Now
Usually only in dry conditions with clear visibility, when the failed wiper is not binding, the working wiper still operates normally, and you are driving a short distance to address the issue.
Maybe Okay for a Very Short Distance
Possibly acceptable only to get off the road or reach a nearby repair location if the weather is light, the windshield can still be cleared enough to see, and the wiper system is not straining or jamming.
Not Safe to Keep Driving
Do not keep driving in rain, snow, heavy spray, or low visibility, or if the mechanism is binding, the motor is straining, the remaining wiper is slowing down, or the blades no longer clear the windshield safely.
How to Fix It
The right fix depends on whether the problem is at the arm, the linkage under the cowl, the pivot shaft, or the motor assembly. Start with the simplest external checks, then move deeper only if the arm is tight and correctly positioned.
DIY-friendly Checks
Tighten a loose wiper arm nut, remove ice or debris, inspect arm splines, and confirm the arm is indexed correctly on the pivot.
Common Shop Fixes
Replace a stripped wiper arm, install a new linkage bushing or transmission assembly, or replace a seized pivot causing one side to stop.
Higher-skill Repairs
Replace the wiper motor assembly, correct park position, and repair bent or binding linkage components under the cowl when access is limited.
Related Repair Guides
- Remanufactured vs New Starter Motors: Which Is Better?
- Can You Drive with a Bad Starter Motor?
- OEM vs Aftermarket Starter Motors: Which Is Better?
- When to Replace a Starter Motor
- Signs Your Starter Motor Is Bad
Typical Repair Costs
Repair cost depends on the vehicle, how much cowl disassembly is required, and whether the failure is just a slipped arm or a deeper linkage or motor issue. The ranges below are typical U.S. parts-and-labor estimates for common repair paths.
Wiper Arm Tightening or Replacement
Typical cost: $40 to $180
This usually applies when the retaining nut loosened or the arm splines stripped but the pivot shaft is still usable.
Wiper Linkage Bushing or Transmission Repair
Typical cost: $120 to $350
Cost depends on whether a single serviceable joint can be repaired or the full linkage assembly must be replaced.
Wiper Pivot or Transmission Assembly Replacement
Typical cost: $180 to $450
This is common when one pivot has seized and the assembly is sold as a larger unit rather than as a small individual part.
Wiper Motor Replacement
Typical cost: $200 to $500
Pricing rises when the cowl is time-consuming to remove or when the motor comes attached to a transmission frame.
Bent Linkage or Damaged Mechanism Repair After Ice Load
Typical cost: $150 to $400
This range fits cases where frozen blades or heavy snow damaged rods, joints, or the arm alignment.
What Affects Cost?
- Vehicle design and cowl access time
- Whether the failed part is sold separately or only as an assembly
- OEM versus aftermarket part choice
- Damage caused by continued use after binding started
- Local labor rates
Cost Takeaway
If the dead wiper simply slipped on the pivot and the linkage underneath is fine, repair is often on the lower end. Once the linkage is disconnected, bent, or seized, expect a mid-range repair. If the motor has also been overloaded or the whole assembly must come out, costs move up more quickly.
Symptoms That Can Look Similar
- Wipers Stop in the Wrong Park Position: Common Causes and What to Check
- Washer Fluid Sprays but Wipers Do Not Work: Common Causes and What to Check
- Wipers Stopped Mid Swipe
- Wipers Work Only on High Speed: Common Causes and What to Check
- Wipers Move Very Slowly: Common Causes and What to Check
Parts and Tools
- Socket and Ratchet Set
- Trim Removal Tool
- Work Light
- Safety Glasses
- Telescoping Inspection Mirror
- Wiper Arm Puller
FAQ
Why Would Only One Windshield Wiper Stop Working?
Because both wipers usually share one motor, a one-sided failure often means the problem is mechanical on that side, such as a loose arm, stripped splines, a disconnected linkage, or a seized pivot.
Can a Bad Fuse Cause Only One Wiper Not to Move?
Usually no. A fuse or switch problem typically affects the whole wiper system, not just one side. If one wiper still works, look first at the arm, linkage, and pivot on the failed side.
What if One Wiper Stopped After Snow or Ice?
Frozen blades can overload the mechanism and cause the arm to slip on the pivot or damage the linkage underneath the cowl. Inspect for stripped splines, bent parts, or a linkage joint that popped off.
Is It Safe to Drive with One Wiper Not Moving?
Only in dry conditions with clear visibility and only for a short distance. In rain, snow, or heavy spray, one failed wiper can leave too much of the windshield uncleared to drive safely.
Do I Need a Whole Wiper Motor if Just One Wiper Failed?
Not usually. A one-sided failure more often points to the arm, linkage, or pivot. The motor becomes more likely only after those parts check out or if both wipers were already weak or slowing down.
Final Thoughts
When one wiper is not moving, start with the simplest and most common fault on the dead side: a loose or stripped arm. If the arm is secure, the next most useful step is looking under the cowl for a disconnected linkage or a pivot that has started to seize.
The severity depends on weather and whether the mechanism is binding. A minor arm issue can be inexpensive, but a seized pivot or damaged linkage can overload the motor and turn a one-sided problem into a full wiper failure. The clearest path is to match the pattern, inspect the failed side first, and avoid driving in poor visibility until the system works normally again.