If you mean balance them, I say yes because you should balance and ROTATE the tires at the same time, thus making the front tires the back tires, and vise versa, Chuck
The bearing or the bearing shaft of the front wheels are not aligned and the wheel balance alos could be a reason that tends to wear out the front tires.
Either your front end or your tires needs to be aligned.
Did you have the front tires balanced and did you get the front end aligned??
Trade the rear tires to the front and the front tires to the rear. Every other time you do it, trade the right front tire to the left rear and right rear to left front
make sure that the tires are all properly inflated. If they are, then you may need to have the front end aligned.
You may have a damaged belt inside one of the front tires. Try moving the front tires to the rear and the rears to the front and see if the problem follows the tires.
Check the motor mounts as you may have one broken.
Front end toe in is out of alignment. Take it to a trusted alignment shop and have the front end aligned.
A vehicle that is incorrectly aligned will show uneven wear on the front tires. The vehicle may also have front end vibration at higher speeds and may pull to one side while driving on a straight piece of road.
Only on a front wheel drive vehicle. On a rear wheel drive the rear tires wear faster. rotate your tires every 10,000 miles and they will wear evenly.
Why? To even out tire wear. The front tires will wear much quicker than the rears on a FWD vehicle. The front tires are pulling the vehicle and are also steering the vehicle. This causes friction which causes wear. You rotate by simply putting the rear tires on the front and the front tires on the rear every 10,000 miles. Click the link and go to Tire Rotation.
If the tires are the same size then yes.