Origin
In early November 2021, an online advertisement showed a plastic bottle on a tire on a parked car with the text: "Always Put a Plastic Bottle On Your Tires When Parked, Here's Why." A variation read, "Jam A Bottle In Your Parked Car's Tire When Traveling Alone."
We found the ad on a number of news websites alongside legitimate news stories, likely leading some readers to believe that the plastic bottle tip was genuine.
The brand of the water bottle in the picture was Akba (Aqua). We traced it to Russia, which might also be where the advertiser is based.
We clicked the ad. It led to a 50-page slideshow article on a website named Richouses. Its headline read: "Car Maintenance Tips To Help Keep Your Vehicle In Perfect Condition." The same article was also posted on Definition.org, even showing another picture of a plastic bottle on the tire of a parked car.
We flipped through all 50 pages on both websites. The idea to "always put a plastic bottle on your tired when parked" was never mentioned.
This misleading ad looked to be twisted from a previous online scare we reported on in 2018. It also involved plastic bottles, tires, and parked cars. However, in this case, criminals were supposedly placing the bottles in wheel wells so they would make a crunching sound. In theory, this would cause the driver to exit the vehicle to investigate. At that point, the driver would be carjacked. However, our conclusion of the claim was rated "Unproven" as we found no reports that a criminal had done this to anyone.
Our 2018 fact check was similar to other baseless claims we've researched about parked cars. We've looked at strange rumors involving sex traffickers tagging cars, coins and hole punches in door handles, zip ties on mirrors, and cheese on hoods.
Further, as for the "always put a plastic bottle on your tires when parked" ad, we've seen this usage of the word "always" before. For example, other ads said to "always" put a towel under a hotel door, "always" put coins in a hotel's sink, and "always" put a bag over a car mirror.
In sum, no, drivers don't need to put a plastic bottle on their tires when parked. The clickbait advertisement was crafted to make readers click through 50 pages for nothing so that the advertiser could make more money on the ads viewed on each of the 50 pages than it cost to display the original ad that led them there.