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345/50R24 tires

Vehicles that use 345/50R24 as an OEM tire size, the tire models we currently catalog in this size, and the compatible alternative sizes within the ETRTO ±3% safe-fit tolerance.

Paired pages: What does 345/50R24 mean? · 345/50R24 upsize and downsize options

345/50R24 dimensions

37.6″
Overall diameter
955 mm
13.6″
Section width
345 mm
6.8″
Sidewall
173 mm
118″
Circumference
2997 mm
537
Revolutions / mile
measured
24″
Wheel
rim diameter

345/50R24 tires have a diameter of 37.6", a section width of 13.6", and a wheel diameter of 24". The circumference is 118.0" and they have 537 revolutions per mile. Specs may vary by manufacturer. learn more

Vehicles that use this size

No vehicles in our database currently take this size as an OEM fitment.

Tires available in this size

Tire Brand Season UTQG
Atturo Trail Blade X/T Atturo N/A N/A

What changes if you go up or down one aspect step

The cleanest single-step swap is moving the aspect ratio by ±5 points on the same rim. The table below shows the math for 345/50R24 vs the adjacent ±5 aspect sizes.

OEM 345/50R24Down to 345/45R24Up to 345/55R24
Overall diameter954.6 mm920.1 mm989.1 mm
% Δ vs OEM-3.61%3.61%
Sidewall height172.5 mm155.3 mm (-17.3)189.8 mm (+17.3)
True mph at 60 indicated60.00 mph57.83 mph62.17 mph
Verdict (±3% rule)Outside ±3%Outside ±3%

Shorter sidewall (down a step): sharper steering, harsher ride, higher pothole risk. Taller sidewall (up a step): softer ride, fuel-economy gain on highway, less precise handling. Use the compatibility calculator to evaluate any size pair beyond the single-step swap.

What 345/50R24 means

The first number — 345 — is the tire's section width in millimeters (about 13.6 inches from sidewall to sidewall, measured when the tire is mounted and inflated to standard pressure). The second number — 50 — is the aspect ratio: the sidewall height as a percentage of the section width, which works out to 172.5 mm of sidewall for this size. The R indicates radial construction (universal on passenger tires today, mandatory under FMVSS 109), and 24 is the rim diameter in inches. Together these give an overall tire diameter of 954.6 mm (37.6 inches) — the dimension that matters for speedometer accuracy, wheel-well clearance, and TPMS / ABS / AWD calibration.

0 vehicle/year combinations in our catalog list this size as an OEM or approved fitment, and 1 tire models in our catalog are sold in this size. Each one turns about 537 revolutions per mile (circumference 2999 mm × π), which is the figure your speedometer and TPMS modules are calibrated against. When you replace tires within the same size, brand and compound choice are what change the driving experience — every tire in this size is engineered to the same outside diameter, so speedometer error and wheel clearance won't change. Where the differences show up is in tread compound (longer-wearing vs stickier), construction (touring sidewall vs performance-stiff), and season class. For a deeper breakdown of what each digit in the size string represents, see the paired 345/50R24 explained page.

If you are considering deviating from 345/50R24 — a plus-size step up, a winter step down, or a same-rim width change — keep the overall outside diameter within ±3% of the original per the ETRTO 2024 §2.3 safe-fit standard. Major changes to outside diameter affect speedometer calibration (SAE J1349 ±4% factory tolerance), ABS rotational reference (FMVSS 135), TPMS rev/mile tracking (FMVSS 138), and AWD viscous coupling temperature on systems that rely on consistent tire revolutions per mile. The Compatible alternative sizes table above lists every size within tolerance, and the 345/50R24 upsize and downsize options page groups them by upgrade intent (Plus-1, Plus-2, winter narrower, wider, etc.) with verdicts and speedometer impact. Always confirm any non-OEM substitution with the manufacturer or a qualified tire shop before purchase.

For shoppers looking at this size, the key spec questions to ask are: does the tire's load index equal or exceed the OEM placard requirement (Tire & Rim Association 2025 Table 1-2 maps the number to maximum weight), does its speed rating match or exceed the placard, and what is its UTQG treadwear rating? The third question is the best single proxy for tread life: 600+ UTQG signals a long-wear touring compound, 400–600 is mid-life performance, under 300 is short-life high-grip. Cross-reference any candidate tire's spec sheet against the manufacturer's published technical bulletin before committing.

Last verified 2026-05-21.