Weight distribution hitches are often marketed as an all-in-one solution for towing stability. Many RV owners are told that once weight is “properly distributed,” trailer sway won’t be an issue.
But if that were true, why do so many drivers still experience sway — even with a weight distribution hitch installed?
In this blog, we’ll clearly explain what a weight distribution hitch actually does, why trailer sway can still happen, and what it truly takes to eliminate trailer sway instead of just reducing it.
A weight distribution hitch (WDH) is primarily engineered to address vertical load issues, not lateral motion.
Its main functions are to:
These are all important benefits. A properly set up weight distribution hitch absolutely improves overall towing balance and vehicle handling.
However, none of these functions directly eliminates trailer sway.
Trailer sway is a side-to-side motion problem, not a vertical weight problem.
Even with perfect weight distribution:
When wind, passing trucks, road crown, or sudden steering inputs apply lateral force, the trailer can still begin to oscillate.
In other words:
A weight distribution hitch improves balance — but it does not change the physics that allow sway to start.
To address this limitation, many weight distribution hitches add friction-based anti-sway components, such as:
These systems attempt to slow down sway after it begins by adding resistance.
But friction systems have inherent limitations:
This is why many drivers report:
Friction helps — but it does not solve the problem.
To truly eliminate trailer sway, you must remove the condition that allows it to exist.
That condition is pivot leverage.
In conventional towing setups:
As long as that pivot geometry exists, sway is always possible — regardless of weight distribution.
The only way to eliminate sway entirely is to control or relocate the effective pivot point.
An advanced trailer sway control hitch, like the ProPride 3P Hitch, utilizes patented Pivot Point Projection technology.
Instead of allowing the trailer to pivot at the hitch ball, the system:
This is fundamentally different from friction-based systems.
It’s important to clarify:
The difference is that weight distribution is paired with true pivot point control.
This combination:
Many ProPride owners report the same story:
Once they switched to a ProPride 3P Hitch, the problem disappeared — because the underlying physics were finally addressed.
Short answer: No.
Honest answer: It was never designed to.
A weight distribution hitch:
But it does not eliminate trailer sway.
Only a system that controls the trailer’s pivot geometry can do that.
If your goal is:
That’s why the ProPride 3P® trailer sway control hitch goes beyond traditional weight distribution — delivering calm, confident towing in conditions where friction systems fall short.
If you’re ready to stop managing sway and start eliminating it, the answer isn’t more friction — it’s better geometry.