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155/65R13 tire size explained

Every digit in 155/65R13 decoded: section width, aspect ratio, rim diameter, and the derived overall diameter and revolutions per mile that your speedometer and TPMS calibrations depend on.

By Mark Bishop · Last verified 2026-05-17 · See safe alternatives for 155/65R13 · What vehicles use 155/65R13?

The size string, decoded

155section width
(mm)
/ 65aspect ratio
(% of width)
R 13rim diameter
(inches)
road surface 155 mm section width 101 mm sidewall (65% of width) 13" rim
Cross-section of 155/65R13 drawn to scale. The black band is the tire (tread + two sidewalls); the grey ring is the rim.

Computed dimensions

Section width155 mm (6.10 in)
Aspect ratio65% (sidewall = 65% of width)
Rim diameter13 in (330.2 mm)
Sidewall height100.8 mm (3.97 in)
Overall diameter531.7 mm (20.93 in)
Circumference1670 mm (65.76 in)
Revolutions per mile963 revs/mi

Overall diameter is the single most important number for fitment compatibility, because it determines how far the tire travels per revolution. Speedometer, odometer, TPMS rev/mile calibration, ABS rotational reference, and AWD viscous coupling all consume overall diameter (directly or indirectly). Per ETRTO 2024 §2.3, the formula is:

overall_diameter_mm = rim_inches × 25.4 + 2 × (width_mm × aspect_percent / 100)

For 155/65R13, this resolves to 13 × 25.4 + 2 × (155 × 65 / 100) = 330.2 + 201.5 = 531.7 mm.

Try changing the numbers

The calculator below mirrors the same formula your speedometer and ABS modules use. Edit any field to see how the dimensions move.

Where 155/65R13 shows up

155/65R13 appears as an OEM or approved fitment on 30 vehicle/year combinations in our catalog. The earliest model year in our data is 1971 on the Honda Life. The size is most heavily used by Honda, Chevrolet, which is consistent with the segment positioning the dimensions imply.

This is the same data the size's reverse-lookup page renders in table form. The explained page tells you what the size means; the reverse-lookup page tells you what cars use it.

What changes if any of the numbers move

Width up 10 mm (e.g. 155 → 165): contact patch widens, dry grip and steering load both increase, fuel economy drops slightly. Overall diameter rises 13.0 mm.

Aspect down 5 points (e.g. 65 → 60): sidewall shortens by 7.8 mm, steering sharpens, ride harshness rises, pothole risk increases. Overall diameter drops by twice that.

Rim up 1 inch (e.g. 13 → 14): rim diameter rises 25.4 mm. To preserve overall diameter (the standard "plus-1" pattern), drop aspect by ~10 points and add ~10 mm of width simultaneously. See the plus-size calculator for the math.

What the R means: radial construction

The R between aspect and rim diameter indicates radial construction: the tire's internal cords run perpendicular to the direction of travel, from bead to bead. The alternative is bias-ply construction (denoted by D, B, or no letter at all), where cords run diagonally and stack on each other. Radial tires dominate the passenger-tire market because they give a longer-lived contact patch, lower rolling resistance, and better high-speed stability. Bias-ply survives in specialty applications: trailer tires (where the stiffer sidewall is an advantage), some agricultural and classic-vehicle restorations, and occasional motorcycle fitments. The R designation has been standard on US-market passenger tires since the late 1970s and is mandatory on every modern car tire under FMVSS 109.

You'll occasionally see ZR in older size strings (e.g. 225/45ZR17). The Z signifies the tire is rated above 240 km/h (149 mph) — historically the highest speed rating before V, W, and Y were added to the ladder. On current tires the speed rating is encoded separately after the load index, but the ZR notation persists on legacy and high-performance models.

What's NOT in the size string

The width-aspect-rim trio defines geometry only. Several other critical specifications appear elsewhere on the sidewall and matter just as much for fitment compatibility:

The tire sidewall codes guide walks through every marking position on a typical sidewall.

Sources & methodology

Last verified 2026-05-17 against the standards below.

  1. ETRTO 2024 Standards Manual §2.3 (section width, aspect ratio, overall diameter formula). European Tyre and Rim Technical Organisation, Brussels.
  2. Tire & Rim Association 2025 Yearbook (North American passenger tire dimensions and load index reference). T&RA, Copley OH.
  3. ISO 4000-1:2021 Passenger car tyres and rims — Part 1: Tyre designations. International Organization for Standardization.
  4. SAE J1349 (speedometer accuracy tolerance).

FAQ

What does 155/65R13 mean on a tire?
155 is the section width in millimetres (the tread footprint, measured wall to wall). 65 is the aspect ratio, meaning the sidewall height is 65% of the section width — in this case, 101 mm. The R indicates radial construction (universal on modern passenger tires). 13 is the rim diameter the tire is built for, in inches.
What is the overall diameter of 155/65R13?
531.7 mm (20.93 inches), computed as rim diameter × 25.4 + 2 × (width × aspect / 100) per ETRTO 2024 §2.3.
How many revolutions per mile does 155/65R13 turn?
963 revolutions per mile. This is the figure speedometer and TPMS calibrations are tuned for — change overall diameter by more than ±3% and both go out of spec per SAE J1349 and FMVSS 138.
Why is the third number in inches when the first two are millimetres?
Historical accident. Section width converted to millimetres globally in the 1970s, but rim diameter stayed in inches because the wheel-manufacturing industry never converted its tooling. ETRTO and ISO 4000-1 codified the mixed-unit convention to match what was already in production.
What is the difference between 155/65R13 and the size shown on my vehicle's door placard?
If they match exactly, none. If they differ, the placard is the authoritative source — it represents the OEM-validated combination of tire size, load index, and speed rating for your specific vehicle. Substitutions should stay within ±3% overall diameter and match or exceed the placard load index and speed rating.