Speedos lie when you resize
A 3% larger diameter makes your speedometer under-read by the same 3%—an indicated 60 mph is ~61.8 mph actual.
Use this tire size calculator to compare your original tire size with a new size before changing wheels or tires. The most important number is the overall diameter difference, because it affects speedometer accuracy, ride height, gearing, and clearance.
Tire sizes are given as Width/Aspect R Rim, e.g., 225/45R17.
Note: This calculator compares tire sizes only. Wheel width, offset, brake and fender clearances, and load/speed ratings are not assessed.
These links open the calculator with common stock and replacement tire sizes prefilled. Use them as starting points, then adjust the sizes, speed, wheel width, or offset for your vehicle.
Alternative tire sizes are useful for plus sizing, winter tire downsizing, wheel upgrades, or replacing an uncommon OEM size. These links preload the original size and a common candidate so you can compare diameter, speedometer error, and equivalent-size suggestions.
Equivalent tire sizes are alternative sizes with a similar overall diameter to the original tire. They are often used when changing wheel diameter, choosing winter tires, or finding a more available replacement size. Start with your stock size, choose a target rim diameter, and compare candidates against the original diameter.
These static tire size charts list common sizes by rim diameter. Use them to find candidate sizes, then run the calculator to compare diameter, sidewall, revs per mile, and speedometer error.
Overall diameter is calculated as 2 × (width × aspect ÷ 100) + rim × 25.4.
Speedometer correction is actual speed = indicated speed × new diameter ÷ stock diameter.
Ask a tire shop or fitment specialist when changing wheel width, offset, load rating, tire class, or overall diameter by more than a small amount, especially on AWD vehicles or vehicles with driver-assist systems.
Last reviewed: May 18, 2026. Version v1.2 added quick decision guidance, popular comparison links, alternative-size coverage, tire size charts, fitment notes, and updated schema metadata.
Editorial review: Starlight Tools engineering team. This page is a geometry calculator, not a fitment certification.
Modern tire codes look cryptic at first glance—something like 225/45R17—but each part
describes a dimension that affects how your car accelerates, brakes, corners, and reports speed.
The first number is the section width in millimetres (225 mm here). The second is the
aspect ratio, a percentage of the width (45% of 225 mm) that determines sidewall height.
The letter R indicates radial construction, and the last number is the rim diameter in inches.
From these, you can derive overall diameter, circumference, and revolutions per distance—exactly what this calculator shows.
A common rule of thumb is to keep overall diameter within roughly ±3% of the original size to preserve speedometer accuracy, gearing feel, and fender/brake clearance. Larger diameters reduce revs per mile (taller gearing), often showing a lower indicated speed than actual. Smaller diameters do the reverse. Our results call out diameter deltas and speedometer error so you can judge suitability quickly.
Compare 225/45R17 to 235/40R18. The 18-inch option typically has a shorter sidewall to
offset the larger rim, keeping the overall diameter similar. If the calculator shows a diameter
change near zero, speedometer and gearing feel remain close to stock; if it shows ~2–3% larger,
expect a small actual-speed increase versus indicated and slightly taller gearing.
Disclaimer: This tool estimates geometry only. It does not guarantee fitment or legal compliance. Always confirm clearances on-vehicle and follow manufacturer specifications.
Try 225/45R17, 225/45-17, or 225 45 17. Width and aspect are metric; rim is inches.
Many guides suggest keeping overall diameter within ~3% of stock for speedometer accuracy and clearance. This is not a guarantee—always check clearances.
They relate to gearing and speedometer calibration. Fewer revs/mile typically means a larger diameter tire.
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A 3% larger diameter makes your speedometer under-read by the same 3%—an indicated 60 mph is ~61.8 mph actual.
Taller sidewalls act like extra suspension. Dropping from 55 to 35 series can stiffen ride noticeably, even at the same diameter.
Fewer revs/mile (bigger diameter) lengthen gearing, lowering cruise RPM and slightly blunting off-the-line punch.
The stamped width (e.g., 235 mm) is nominal. Mounted width shifts with wheel width and tire model; a “245” can measure 252 mm.
Over 90% of a tire’s load support comes from air pressure, not the sidewall itself—hence big changes from a few psi.