The number printed on your tire sidewall — something like 225/65R17 98H — contains everything you need to buy the correct replacement. Each part tells you the width, sidewall height, construction type, wheel size, load capacity, and speed capability.
Decoding a Tire Size: 225/65R17 98H
$$\underbrace{P}{type}\underbrace{225}{width\ (mm)}/\underbrace{65}{aspect\ ratio}\underbrace{R}{radial}\underbrace{17}{wheel\ (in)}\ \underbrace{98}{load\ index}\underbrace{H}_{speed}$$
| Code Part | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Tire type | P | P = Passenger; LT = Light Truck; no letter = Euro metric |
| Section width | 225 | Tire width in millimeters (tread face to tread face) |
| Aspect ratio | 65 | Sidewall height = 65% of width (225 × 0.65 = 146 mm) |
| Construction | R | R = Radial (virtually all modern tires) |
| Wheel diameter | 17 | Rim size in inches |
| Load index | 98 | Maximum load capacity (98 = 1,653 lbs per tire) |
| Speed rating | H | Maximum sustained speed (H = 130 mph) |
Aspect Ratio: What It Affects
The aspect ratio tells you how tall the sidewall is relative to the width.
| Aspect Ratio | Sidewall Feel | Handling | Ride Comfort |
|---|---|---|---|
| 70+ (tall sidewall) | Cushioned | Less precise | Comfortable |
| 55–65 (standard) | Balanced | Good | Good |
| 40–50 (low profile) | Stiff | More precise | Harsher |
| 35 and below (ultra-low) | Very stiff | Sport feel | Rough |
Lower aspect ratios generally come with larger wheel diameters. A 225/35R20 and a 225/65R17 cover approximately the same total wheel+tire diameter — the difference is how the diameter is split between the wheel and the sidewall.
Common Speed Ratings
| Letter | Max Speed |
|---|---|
| S | 112 mph |
| T | 118 mph |
| H | 130 mph |
| V | 149 mph |
| W | 168 mph |
| Y | 186 mph |
| (Y) | Over 186 mph |
Always match or exceed the OEM speed rating. Never install tires with a lower speed rating than specified by your manufacturer.
Load Index Chart (Common Values)
| Index | Max Load per Tire |
|---|---|
| 85 | 1,135 lbs |
| 91 | 1,356 lbs |
| 95 | 1,521 lbs |
| 98 | 1,653 lbs |
| 103 | 1,929 lbs |
| 108 | 2,205 lbs |
Your four tires combined must be rated to carry the car’s GVWR (gross vehicle weight rating). Never replace tires with a lower load index than OEM.
Where to Find Your Correct Tire Size
- Driver’s door jamb sticker — most reliable; lists OEM tire size and inflation pressure
- Owner’s manual — lists approved tire sizes and any approved alternates
- Glove box or fuel door — some vehicles list tire specs here
- Tire retailer website — enter year, make, model for OEM size lookup
Can You Change Tire Sizes?
Small deviations from OEM size are common when upgrading wheels or tires:
- One aspect ratio step (e.g., 65 → 60) — minimal effect; check overall diameter
- Wheel diameter change — compensate with aspect ratio to keep overall diameter within 3% of OEM (beyond this, speedometer reads incorrectly and wheel arches may rub)
Use an online tire size calculator to verify overall diameter before buying non-OEM sizes.
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