Shop by Popular Tire Size

Save time by skipping the vehicle selector. We have compiled a list of the most frequently requested tire sizes for cars, SUVs, and light trucks. Simply locate your size in the table below and click to instantly view our current inventory and pricing.

Top 20 Common Tire Sizes in the GTA

This spreadsheet provides a practical, service-focused overview of the 20 most common tire sizes used on passenger cars, crossovers, SUVs, and light trucks in the Greater Toronto Area. It is designed to help technicians, mobile tire operators, and sales teams quickly identify high-volume tire sizes and the vehicle makes and models most commonly associated with each one.

The information is based on real-world market patterns, common OEM fitments, and the types of vehicles most frequently serviced across the GTA. While exact sales rankings vary by dealership, region, and model year, the sizes listed here represent the core fitments you will encounter repeatedly during seasonal changes, tire repairs, and replacement consultations.

# Tire Size Link to Results Typical Segment Common Example Vehicles (GTA – NON-TESLA)
1 195/65R15 View Tires Older compact sedans Toyota Corolla 2014–2016; Honda Civic 2012–2015; Hyundai Elantra; VW Jetta.
2 205/55R16 View Tires Compact sedans Corolla LE/SE; VW Golf/Jetta; Civic EX; Mazda3; Hyundai Elantra.
3 205/60R16 View Tires Compact & midsize sedans Subaru Impreza; Mazda3 GS; Honda Accord/Camry (older); Nissan Sentra/Altima.
4 215/55R16 View Tires Modern compact sedans Honda Civic LX/EX; Nissan Sentra; Hyundai Elantra; Kia Forte.
5 215/60R16 View Tires Midsize sedans Toyota Camry; Honda Accord; Chevy Malibu; Hyundai Sonata.
6 215/55R17 View Tires Modern sedans Civic Touring/Sport; Mazda3 GT; Elantra N-Line; Subaru Legacy.
7 225/45R17 View Tires Sporty compacts VW GTI; Jetta GLI; Subaru WRX; BMW 3-Series; Mazda3 GT.
8 225/60R17 View Tires Sedans & compact SUVs Camry SE; Subaru Outback; Hyundai Sonata; older Nissan Rogue.
9 225/65R17 View Tires Most common CUV size RAV4 LE; CR-V LX/EX; Rogue S/SV; Tucson; Mazda CX-5.
10 235/65R17 View Tires Compact & midsize SUVs CR-V; Santa Fe; Sorento; Highlander (older); Ford Escape.
11 235/60R18 View Tires Modern CUVs RAV4 XLE; CX-5 GT; Santa Fe; Equinox; Terrain; Rogue SL.
12 235/55R18 View Tires CUVs & crossovers Ford Escape; Ford Edge; Santa Fe; Sportage; Tiguan; Audi Q5.
13 225/55R19 View Tires Newer compact SUVs RAV4 Limited; Rogue Platinum; Santa Fe Preferred; CX-5 Signature.
14 235/55R19 View Tires Higher-trim SUVs RAV4 Limited/Trail; Santa Fe Ultimate; Sorento EX; Tiguan Highline.
15 245/60R18 View Tires 3-row SUVs & minivans Highlander LE; Pilot EX; Pathfinder; Durango; Pacifica.
16 235/70R16 View Tires Older SUVs & small trucks RAV4 (2006–2012); CR-V (2002–2006); Jeep Liberty; Escape 2008–2012.
17 265/70R17 View Tires Light trucks & body-on-frame SUVs 4Runner; Tacoma; F-150 XL/XLT; Silverado WT; Sierra base.
18 275/60R20 View Tires Half-ton pickups F-150 Lariat; Ram 1500; Silverado LTZ; Sierra AT4/Denali.
19 235/50R18 View Tires Sport sedans & crossovers Accord Sport; Camry XSE; Fusion Titanium; Sonata N-Line; Acura TLX.
20 215/50R17 View Tires Sporty compact sedans Civic Touring; Mazda3 GS/GT; Elantra Sport; Forte GT-Line.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • The "7-for-7" rule is the industry standard for timing your seasonal tire swap. You should install winter tires once the daily average temperature stays below 7°C (45°F) for 7 consecutive days. At this temperature, all-season rubber stiffens and loses grip. Conversely, you should switch back to all-season or summer tires in the spring only after temperatures remain above 7°C for 7 consecutive days.

  • The +/- 3% rule states that if you change your tire size or rim size, the overall diameter of the new setup must remain within 3% of the original factory tire's diameter. Exceeding this 3% variance can cause speedometer errors, transmission shift point issues, and even failure of safety systems like ABS and Stability Control, which rely on precise wheel rotation speeds.

  • Do not rely on the tires currently on the car, as a previous owner may have installed the wrong size. The most accurate place to find your factory tire size is the Tire and Loading Information Placard, a sticker located on the driver’s side door jamb. You can also find this information in your vehicle’s owner's manual.

  • We strongly advise against buying used tires from private sellers. Used tires often hide internal structural damage from impacts that cannot be seen from the outside. Additionally, the rubber may be expired (check the DOT date code; over 6 years is unsafe) or have uneven wear patterns that cause dangerous vibrations. Unlike a shop, private sales come with no warranty or safety guarantee. As a matter of fact, we don’t install tires from marketplace.