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1h ago · 15 min read
Walk up to any car and look at the tires. You'll see something like "P215/55R17 93V" followed by a bunch of other numbers and codes. Most people ignore them. That's a mistake. Every piece of information on your tire's sidewall is there for a reason, and understanding it tells you what the tire is capable of, when it was made, and whether it's the right tire for your car.
I've seen people mix incompatible tire types on the same axle, run tires that were 8 years old and dangerously dry-rotted, and mount tires with the wrong load rating for their truck. All of these are safety risks. Reading a sidewall takes 30 seconds and prevents all of them.
Let me decode every marking on a modern passenger tire sidewall, from the basic size to the DOT date code to the UTQG ratings that the tire companies don't really want you to understand.
This is the most prominent marking on the tire and the one you need to match when buying replacements. Let's go character by character.
P = Passenger (P-Metric)
The "P" designates a P-Metric tire, which means it's designed for passenger vehicles (cars, minivans, small SUVs, light-duty pickups). P-Metric is the North American standard.
Other letters you might see:
215 = Section Width (millimeters)
This is the tire's width from sidewall to sidewall, measured in millimeters. 215 means the tire is 215mm wide, which is about 8.5 inches. Note that this is the SECTION width (the widest point of the tire, typically at the middle of the sidewall), not the tread width. The tread width is slightly narrower — usually about 70-80% of the section width.
A wider tire (larger first number) puts more rubber on the road, which generally improves dry grip and cornering but increases rolling resistance (lower MPG), adds weight, and can be worse in snow and rain (wider tires "float" on snow and hydroplane more easily on water). There's a sweet spot for every car. Stick with the OEM size unless you know why you're changing.
55 = Aspect Ratio (percentage)
This is the tire's profile — the height of the sidewall expressed as a percentage of the section width. A 55-series tire has a sidewall height equal to 55% of its width. For a 215mm wide tire, the sidewall height is 215 × 0.55 = 118.25mm (about 4.7 inches).
Lower aspect ratios (40, 45, 50) = shorter sidewalls = sharper steering response, better cornering, harsher ride, more vulnerable to pothole damage. Sporty cars and modern sedans typically run 40-55 series tires.
Higher aspect ratios (60, 65, 70, 75) = taller sidewalls = more ride comfort, better pothole protection, softer steering response. Trucks, SUVs, and older cars typically run 65-75 series tires.
R = Radial Construction
This means the tire's internal cord plies run radially — perpendicular to the direction of travel across the tread, then parallel to each other along the sidewall. Radial tires have been standard on all passenger vehicles since the 1980s. A "D" or "-" instead of "R" means diagonal (bias-ply) construction, which you'll only see on vintage cars, some trailer tires, and agricultural equipment. If your car has "D" tires, someone put the wrong tires on it.
Radial tires run cooler, last longer, and provide better fuel economy than bias-ply. They also have more flexible sidewalls, which is why radial tires look slightly "bulged" at the bottom where they contact the ground — that's normal and designed.
17 = Wheel Diameter (inches)
The diameter of the wheel the tire is designed to fit, measured in inches. A 17-inch tire fits a 17-inch wheel. This is non-negotiable — a 17-inch tire will not fit on a 16-inch or 18-inch wheel, period. The tire and wheel diameters must match exactly.
93 = Load Index
This is a numerical code that corresponds to the maximum weight the tire can support when inflated to its maximum pressure. 93 corresponds to 1,433 pounds (650 kg) per tire. A set of four tires with load index 93 can support a vehicle weighing up to about 5,732 pounds (assuming even weight distribution — which is never the case, but it's the rating).
Common load index values:
Never replace a tire with one that has a LOWER load index than the vehicle manufacturer specifies. The load index is on the tire placard in your driver's door jamb. If the placard says 93, don't buy a 91 — even if the size is the same. The tire won't safely support the vehicle's weight when loaded. Going higher is fine (a 97 on a car that requires 93) — the tire is stronger than needed, which is safe.
V = Speed Rating
The maximum sustained speed the tire is designed to handle. V rating = 149 mph (240 km/h).
Common speed ratings:
You can always use a tire with a HIGHER speed rating than the vehicle manufacturer requires. A V-rated tire on a car that came with H-rated tires is perfectly fine — it's a better tire, not a mismatch. Never use a lower speed rating than specified. The speed rating is on the door jamb placard.
Speed rating also correlates with handling performance: higher speed-rated tires generally have stiffer sidewalls, higher-grip tread compounds, and better heat resistance. They also tend to wear faster (softer compounds) and ride harsher (stiffer sidewalls).
Every tire sold in the US has a Department of Transportation (DOT) code molded into the sidewall. It's a string like "DOT U2LL LMLR 2524." The important part is the last four digits.
First two characters = Plant code. Identifies the specific factory where the tire was manufactured. Interesting but not relevant to you as a consumer.
Various middle characters = Manufacturer's internal size and construction codes.
Last four digits = The date of manufacture. This is the most important piece of information on the tire after the size. "2524" means the tire was manufactured in the 25th week of 2024 — roughly late June 2024.
Before 2000, the date code was three digits (e.g., "259" = 25th week of 1999). If you see a three-digit date code, those tires are at least 26 years old and should not be on a road-going vehicle.
Why the date matters — the 6-year rule: Tires age even when they're not being driven. The rubber compounds oxidize, the oils that keep the rubber flexible evaporate, and the tire gradually hardens and loses grip. Most tire manufacturers and safety organizations (NHTSA, AAA, Tire Rack) recommend replacing tires when they reach 6-10 years of age, regardless of tread depth.
A 6-year-old tire with full tread depth may LOOK fine but will have reduced wet grip, reduced snow grip, and increased risk of tread separation — especially in hot weather and at highway speeds. The rubber hardens, which reduces its ability to conform to the road surface.
When buying "new" tires, check the date code. I've seen tires sold as "new" that were 3-4 years old — they'd been sitting in a warehouse. You're paying for a tire that has already lost a third of its service life to aging. Most tire shops will honor a request for tires manufactured within the last 12 months. Ask before they mount them.
The Uniform Tire Quality Grading (UTQG) system is a US government-mandated rating system. The ratings are molded into the sidewall: "TREADWEAR 500 TRACTION AA TEMPERATURE A." Here's what they actually mean:
Treadwear — A relative number, NOT a mileage guarantee
The treadwear rating is a number like 200, 360, 500, or 720. It's a RELATIVE measure of how long the tire's tread should last compared to a control tire rated at 100. A tire rated at 300 should theoretically last about three times as long as the control tire.
But here's the catch: UTQG treadwear ratings are assigned by the tire manufacturer, not by an independent lab. Each manufacturer sets their own baseline. A "500" treadwear Michelin does not necessarily last the same distance as a "500" treadwear Goodyear. The ratings are only useful for comparing tires WITHIN THE SAME BRAND.
General guidelines:
The tradeoff: Higher treadwear number = harder rubber compound = longer life but less grip. A 700 treadwear tire will last 80,000 miles but won't grip nearly as well in wet or dry as a 300 treadwear tire. For a commuter car, prioritize life. For a car you drive enthusiastically, prioritize grip. There's no free lunch — the compound formulation determines both grip and wear rate.
Traction — AA, A, B, or C
This measures the tire's ability to stop on WET pavement (specifically wet asphalt and wet concrete in a straight-line braking test). It does NOT measure dry traction, cornering grip, or snow/ice performance.
The difference between AA and A is meaningful — AA tires stop several feet shorter from highway speeds in wet conditions. For a car driven in rain, AA traction is worth seeking out.
Temperature — A, B, or C
This measures the tire's ability to dissipate heat at high speeds. Heat buildup is what causes tire failure at speed — the tire gets hot, the internal bonds weaken, and a tread separation or blowout occurs. Higher temperature ratings mean the tire can sustain higher speeds for longer periods without overheating.
For any highway-driven car, you want A or B. If you see a C rating on a tire for your daily driver, find a different tire.
Max Pressure — "MAX PRESS 44 PSI" or "MAX INFLATION 51 PSI"
This is the MAXIMUM pressure the tire can safely contain when cold — it's NOT the recommended pressure for your car. Your recommended tire pressure is on the door jamb placard, usually 30-35 PSI for most passenger cars. Inflating to the max pressure on the sidewall will give you a harsh ride, reduced grip, and uneven center tread wear. Use the door jamb number.
Max Load — "MAX LOAD 1433 LBS"
The maximum weight the tire can support at its maximum inflation pressure. This corresponds to the load index (93 in our example). Don't exceed it.
M+S — "Mud and Snow"
A tire marked M+S (or M/S, or MS) meets a very basic standard for snow traction. The standard is simply that the tread has at least 25% open void area (gaps between tread blocks). It's a geometric requirement, not a performance test. An M+S tire may be okay in light snow but is NOT necessarily a true winter tire.
3PMSF — Three-Peak Mountain Snowflake symbol (mountain with a snowflake inside)
This IS a performance-based rating. A tire with the 3PMSF symbol has passed an actual snow traction test and meets a minimum threshold for acceleration on packed snow. This marking is required on true winter tires and is increasingly found on all-weather tires. A 3PMSF tire is significantly better in snow than an M+S-only tire.
Rotation Arrows
If the tire has "ROTATION →" with a directional arrow, it's a directional tire designed to rotate in only one direction. The tread pattern is optimized for water evacuation in that specific direction. Mounting a directional tire backwards will dramatically reduce wet grip and increase hydroplaning risk. Directional tires can't be cross-rotated in an X pattern — only front-to-rear on the same side.
"OUTSIDE" or "INSIDE"
Asymmetric tires have different tread patterns on the inner and outer edges of the tread. The outer edge is optimized for dry cornering, the inner edge for water evacuation. The tire MUST be mounted with the "OUTSIDE" marking facing outward. If you see "INSIDE" facing you, the tire is mounted wrong and needs to be remounted.
This is one of those things that gets people hurt and they don't understand why. Having different tire constructions, sizes, or significantly different tread depths on the left and right sides of the same axle creates a traction imbalance.
Here's what happens: in an emergency lane change or hard braking in the rain, the two tires on the same axle have different grip levels. One side grips while the other slips. The car rotates unpredictably. ABS and stability control can compensate somewhat, but there's a limit — if one tire has good tread and the other is nearly bald, the difference exceeds what the stability control can manage. The car spins.
The rules:
When you're buying replacement tires (one or a full set), here's what must match your vehicle's specifications:
The numbers on your tire sidewall are not random. The size tells you what fits. The load index and speed rating tell you what's safe. The DOT date code tells you how old the tire is. The UTQG ratings tell you roughly how long it'll last and how well it'll grip. The M+S and 3PMSF symbols tell you whether it's actually a winter tire.
Take 30 seconds to read your sidewalls next time you're near your car. Check the date code — if it's been 6+ years since those tires were manufactured, start budgeting for replacements regardless of tread depth. Check that the load index and speed rating match what's on your door jamb placard. Make sure you don't have mismatched tires on the same axle.
Rubber is the only thing connecting your car to the road. Four contact patches, each about the size of your hand. Understanding your tires might be the most important automotive knowledge you never learned.
Got questions about your specific tires? Post what you see on the sidewall and what's on your door jamb placard. I'll tell you if everything checks out.
— 老李 (Li), ASE Certified Master Technician, 15 years in dealerships and independent shops
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