Underseal is intended to protect against salt, moisture, and impact damage from gravel,[1] which can chip ordinary paint, allowing rusting to begin. Underseal can also reduce road noise.[2] Newer cars are typically manufactured with corrosion protection, making after-market undersealing unnecessary.[3]
Historically, a bitumen-based compound was used,[2] but after approximately a decade, such coatings become brittle, and water can become trapped between the underseal and body metal, counterproductively creating a more favourable environment for rust than if no underseal were applied at all. Wax-based underseals do not have this disadvantage, but can be eroded and eventually washed if a pressure washer is used to clean the vehicle's underbody. Rubber-based underseals are also sometimes used.
Vehicles for sale in some territories are not undersealed, because the climate is not sufficiently aggressive to warrant it. If such a vehicle is subsequently imported into a country with some combination of high rainfall, cold winters, and salting of roads to prevent ice, application of underseal is often used.