Yes, the load index sets the max weight a tire can carry at its rated speed, and using too low a rating can cause heat, wear, and failure.
You’re shopping for tires and you spot the numbers: 205/55R16 91V, 235/60R18 103H, 275/65R18 116T. Most people fixate on the size, then shrug at the two- or three-digit number. That’s the load index, and it’s not a decoration.
If you’ve ever felt a car get floaty with a loaded trunk, watched a sidewall look “squishy” on a hot day, or noticed your tires chewing the shoulders after a road trip, you’ve seen what the wrong load rating can set off. The good news: you don’t need an engineering degree to pick the right one. You just need a clean method.
This article shows what the load index means, how it ties to your vehicle’s door-jamb label, when a higher rating makes sense, and where people get burned when they guess.
Does Load Index Matter On Tire? What That Number Controls
The load index is a standardized code that maps to a specific weight limit per tire. It’s paired with the speed rating letter (like H, V, W) as part of the “service description” on the sidewall. In plain terms: it tells you how much weight each tire is built to handle at its rated speed when inflated to the spec tied to that rating.
That “per tire” part matters. Your car doesn’t sit on one tire. It sits on four, and weight isn’t split perfectly. Front-heavy cars load the front tires more. A pickup with a bed full of gear loads the rears more. Braking and cornering add extra load on top of static weight. That’s why the rating isn’t a casual suggestion.
One more nuance: load index is not the same as “load range” (often seen on LT tires). Load range is a construction and pressure class. Load index is the standardized number that translates to a weight limit. They often travel together in conversations, yet they’re different labels.
Load Index On Tires For Passenger Cars And SUVs
You’ll see the load index on the tire’s sidewall, usually right after the size. A common marking looks like this:
- 225/45R17 94W → 94 is the load index; W is the speed rating.
- 265/70R17 115T → 115 is the load index; T is the speed rating.
If you want a fast refresher on where to find it and what it means in day-to-day tire shopping, both Michelin’s load and speed rating explainer and Goodyear’s tire load index page lay out the labeling and the core definition in clear language.
Why The Door-Jamb Sticker Beats Guesswork
Your vehicle already tells you what it expects. Open the driver’s door and look for the Tire and Loading Information label (or a placard nearby). It lists the original tire size and the recommended cold tire pressure for the vehicle as built.
That label is tied to the vehicle’s ratings. In the U.S., federal rules cover how manufacturers present tire and load info on the placard and how tire selection relates to axle ratings. If you like reading the rulebook, the text lives in 49 CFR §571.110 (Tire selection and rims).
Here’s the practical takeaway: the placard spec is a safe baseline for that vehicle. When you change tire size, switch brands, or move from standard load to XL, you still need a load index that meets the vehicle’s needs.
What Load Index Does Not Tell You
Load index doesn’t tell you traction, tread life, wet braking, snow grip, or ride comfort by itself. It doesn’t tell you the right pressure for your car, either. The placard does that for stock sizing. The tire’s sidewall lists a maximum pressure for the tire’s own rating, which is a different number with a different job.
So treat load index as a capacity constraint. It’s the “don’t go below this” boundary when you’re choosing tires.
What Goes Wrong With A Load Index That’s Too Low
When a tire is asked to carry more weight than it’s rated for, it flexes more. Flex creates heat. Heat speeds up wear and can weaken internal structure. That’s the chain reaction nobody wants.
Heat Buildup And Rapid Wear
An overloaded tire works harder every rotation. You might see faster shoulder wear, a “melted” look at the edges after highway driving, or a tire that needs frequent top-ups. Heat can also push pressures higher during driving, which changes how the tire contacts the road.
Handling That Feels Off
A tire running near or past its capacity can feel vague. Steering may feel delayed. Lane changes can feel softer than you expect. If you tow, haul cargo, or drive a tall SUV, that mushy feel can show up fast.
Higher Odds Of Failure
Failure isn’t guaranteed, yet the risk climbs when the tire is overloaded, underinflated, or both. Potholes and curb hits hit harder when a tire is already stressed. Long highway runs in summer heat add even more strain.
If you want a government-run hub for tire basics and tire-related ratings info, NHTSA’s tire safety page is a solid reference point.
Can You Use A Higher Load Index Than Stock?
Yes, in many cases you can go up, as long as the size fits the wheel, clears the vehicle, and you don’t break other constraints like speed rating or required construction type. Going higher can make sense when:
- You drive with passengers and cargo often.
- You tow within the vehicle’s limits and want more margin at the tire level.
- You own an EV or a heavy SUV that eats tires and runs higher axle loads.
- Your original tires were XL and you’re tempted to replace them with standard load.
Still, “higher is better” isn’t a universal rule. A higher load rating can come with stiffer construction. That can change ride feel, noise, and steering response. Sometimes it’s a nice, planted feel. Sometimes it’s a bit harsher over broken pavement.
If you step up in load rating, don’t inflate to the tire’s sidewall max just because you can. Use the vehicle placard pressure as your baseline for stock sizing, then adjust only when you have a clear reason tied to load, handling, or wear. If you’re changing sizes or load classes, a tire shop can match the correct load-and-pressure relationship using manufacturer tables for that exact tire model.
How To Match Load Index To Your Real Driving Loads
This is the part that saves money and headaches. You’re not trying to guess a magic number. You’re trying to make sure the tire’s rating covers what the vehicle will ask of it.
Step 1: Start With The Placard Tire Spec
Write down the original tire size and the placard pressure. If your vehicle lists front and rear sizes, keep them separate. Staggered setups can have different load needs front vs rear.
Step 2: Check Your Current Tire’s Service Description
Look at the sidewall and find the two- or three-digit number plus the letter. If your current tires match the vehicle’s spec and you’ve had no load-related issues, that service description is a strong baseline.
Step 3: Factor In The “You” Variables
Ask yourself a few straight questions:
- Do you often carry four or five adults?
- Do you load tools, gear, or heavy cargo weekly?
- Do you tow, even a small trailer, more than once in a while?
- Do you take long highway trips in hot months?
If most answers are “yes,” staying at the stock load index (or going up one step in rating) usually beats dropping down, even if the lower-rated tire is cheaper.
Step 4: Don’t Drop Load Index When Upsizing Wheels
A common trap: you move to a larger wheel, choose a lower-profile tire, and accidentally pick a lower load index because that’s what’s in stock. The tire might fit physically, yet the capacity can be wrong for the vehicle. Fitment isn’t just “does it bolt on.” It’s “does it carry the load the vehicle can put on it.”
Load Index Cheat Sheet: Ranges, Use Cases, And Common Mistakes
The table below won’t replace the exact load index chart for your tire, yet it helps you think in buckets: what kind of vehicle loads tend to show up, and what kind of shopping mistakes pop up with them.
| Scenario | What To Watch | Practical Move |
|---|---|---|
| Small sedan, light commuting | Switching to a “deal” tire with a lower rating | Match the stock load index on the current tire |
| Family sedan with full passengers | Long trips with packed trunk | Stay at stock rating; avoid dropping a step |
| Compact SUV | Higher center of gravity, heavier curb weight | Match stock rating; keep pressure on placard spec |
| Three-row SUV | Rear axle load climbs fast with cargo | Use stock rating or a higher rating in the same size |
| Pickup used for hauling | Bed loads stress rear tires | Use the rating tied to the truck’s tire class (P-metric vs LT) |
| Towing within vehicle limits | Heat, sway, rear squat | Don’t downgrade; consider XL/LT where the vehicle spec allows |
| EV or heavy hybrid | Higher weight plus instant torque wear | Stick with OE load rating; don’t chase soft sidewalls |
| Wheel upsizing with low-profile tires | Picking by looks, missing load rating | Confirm service description meets or exceeds OE |
| Winter tire set | Different models with different load options | Match OE load rating even if the tread is winter-focused |
XL, Reinforced, LT, And Trailer Tires: Where People Mix Things Up
Most daily vehicles run P-metric passenger tires, sometimes in XL form. Trucks and some SUVs may run LT tires. Trailers often run ST tires. The letters matter because the load behavior and labeling rules can differ by category.
Standard Load Vs XL
XL (Extra Load) tires are designed to carry more weight at higher pressure than standard load tires of the same size. If your vehicle came with XL, replacing with standard load at the same size can mean a lower load index or a tire that doesn’t match how the vehicle was set up to ride and carry weight.
P-Metric On Trucks And SUVs
Some trucks and SUVs use P-metric tires from the factory. Some move to LT tires for hauling. That switch changes more than load. It can change ride feel, handling, and rolling resistance. If you’re making that change, match the use case. A grocery-getter pickup doesn’t need the same tire as a work truck that hauls daily.
Trailers Are Their Own Category
Trailer tires are not car tires with a different label. Trailer setups place load and heat demands on tires in a different way. If you’re towing, the tire choice should follow the trailer manufacturer’s spec for tire type and rating.
Choosing The Right Load Index When Shopping Online
Online listings are convenient, yet they can nudge you into sorting by price and ignoring the service description. Here’s a clean shopping flow that keeps you out of trouble.
Use These Filters First
- Select your vehicle and confirm the OE size shown matches your door placard.
- Filter by load index at or above your current tire’s number.
- Filter by speed rating at or above OE if you want the original driving feel.
- Then sort by the traits you care about: noise, tread life, wet grip, snow rating.
Read The Sidewall Photo In The Listing
If the listing includes a sidewall shot, zoom in and find the service description. If it’s missing, scroll the spec table and confirm the load index and speed rating are stated clearly. If the listing won’t tell you, skip it.
Match Front And Rear If Your Vehicle Uses The Same Size
Mixing load ratings front to rear can change handling feel and wear patterns. If your car uses the same size all around, keep the same load index and speed rating on all four unless the manufacturer spec says otherwise.
One-Page Checklist Before You Buy
This table is a quick “yes/no” scan you can run in two minutes. It’s built to catch the common mistakes that lead to regret: wrong load rating, wrong class, wrong assumptions about pressure.
| Check | What You’re Verifying | Pass Looks Like |
|---|---|---|
| Placard match | OE tire size and baseline pressure | Your chosen size matches, or you have a verified alternate fitment |
| Load index floor | Tire capacity baseline | Load index meets or exceeds the current/OE rating |
| Speed rating match | Service description balance | Speed letter matches OE or steps up without changing tire class |
| Tire class | P-metric vs XL vs LT vs ST | Class matches the vehicle/trailer spec and your real use |
| Load-heavy habit | Passengers, cargo, towing frequency | No downgrade in load rating when you load the vehicle often |
| Inflation plan | Cold pressure baseline | You’ll start with placard pressure for stock sizing |
| Seller clarity | Listing completeness | Load index and speed rating are stated clearly on the page |
Fast Answers To Common Load Index Scenarios
If I Drive Gently, Can I Run A Lower Load Index?
Driving style doesn’t erase vehicle weight. The tire still carries the same base load, plus extra load during braking, turns, bumps, and heat cycles. If you want a tire that lasts and feels right, don’t plan around “I’m gentle.” Plan around what the vehicle can weigh on its heaviest normal day.
If My Tires Rub Less With A Lower Load Rating, Is That A Fix?
Rubbing is usually a sizing, offset, or clearance problem. Fix it at the fitment level. A lower load rating isn’t a clearance tool. It’s a capacity label, and lowering it to solve rubbing can trade one problem for a worse one.
If I Want Softer Ride, Should I Drop Load Index?
Don’t do it. If ride comfort is the goal, choose a tire model known for comfort in the correct size and rating, then run the correct cold pressure from the placard. Sidewall design and tread construction can change ride feel without stepping below the vehicle’s load needs.
Takeaway: The Load Index Is A Fitment Gate, Not A Side Note
If you want one rule you can rely on, it’s this: treat load index as a minimum requirement. Match the OE rating on the door placard or your current tires, then move up only when your use case calls for it. Dropping below can cost you in wear, heat, and stability, even when the tire “fits” your wheel.
When you shop with that mindset, tire buying gets calmer. You’re not guessing. You’re checking boxes, then picking the tread and brand that suit how you drive.
References & Sources
- Michelin USA.“Tire Load Rating & Speed Rating Explained.”Defines load rating and speed rating and shows where to find them on the sidewall.
- Goodyear.“Tire Load Index & Chart.”Explains that the load index maps to a tire’s maximum weight capacity at proper inflation.
- eCFR (U.S. Government).“49 CFR §571.110—Tire selection and rims.”Sets federal requirements tied to tire selection and axle load ratings for light vehicles.
- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).“Tire Safety Ratings and Awareness.”Provides a tire safety hub and explains tire-related ratings information for U.S. consumers.

Certification: BSc in Mechanical Engineering
Education: Mechanical engineer
Lives In: 539 W Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75208, USA
Md Amir is an auto mechanic student and writer with over half a decade of experience in the automotive field. He has worked with top automotive brands such as Lexus, Quantum, and also owns two automotive blogs autocarneed.com and taxiwiz.com.