How Many Balance Beads Per Tire? | Size Chart That Fits

Many passenger tires land near 3 ounces of balancing beads, while larger SUV, truck, and commercial tires may need 4.5 to 23.5 ounces.

If you’re trying to pin down how many balance beads per tire, there isn’t one fixed number that works for every wheel. A skinny passenger tire, a 33-inch all-terrain, and a 22.5-inch commercial tire do not use the same bead load. The right amount depends on tire size, wheel weight, tread style, and whether the tire sits on a single wheel or a dual setup.

The usual ounce ranges narrow it down in a hurry. Many car tires sit around 3 ounces. Many crossover, SUV, and light-truck sizes move into 4.5 or 6.5 ounces. Bigger truck, RV, and bus tires can jump to 8.5, 10.5, 13, or 16 ounces. Wide-base commercial rubber can climb past 20 ounces.

How Many Balance Beads Per Tire? By Tire Size

The cleanest place to start is the maker’s chart, not a guess. In Counteract’s sizing notes, the base rule is 1 ounce of beads for each 13 pounds of tire-and-wheel weight. That gives you a solid starting point when your exact size is missing from a chart.

That rule also shows why bead amounts rise so quickly on trucks. A heavy wheel and tire package carries more rotating mass, so it needs more material moving inside the casing to settle the assembly as it spins. Add a knobby tread or a dual-wheel setup, and the bead amount can step up again.

What Usually Changes The Bead Amount

A few things push the number up or keep it low:

  • Tire diameter and width: Bigger casings tend to need more beads.
  • Wheel weight: Heavier steel wheels often call for more than lighter alloy wheels in the same tire size.
  • Tread style: Mud-terrain and heavy all-terrain tires can need more bead weight than smooth highway tread.
  • Single or dual setup: Dual wheel assemblies often need extra bead weight.
  • Construction: Bias-ply or heavy-ply tires can need a step up from the base chart amount.

Use those points as a filter, not as a reason to wing it. Start with the chart for your tire size. Then adjust only when the bead maker says that tire type, tread, or setup needs more.

When Your Tire Size Is Missing From The Chart

Sometimes your sidewall size is not printed on the bead maker’s chart. That does not mean you need to guess. Start with the full tire-and-wheel weight, divide by 13, and use that number as your first bead target in ounces. Then check whether the tire falls into a step-up case such as duals, mud-terrain tread, or heavy-ply construction.

Pack sizes also shape the final pick. If your math does not land on a neat whole number, match the nearest pack size used for that tire class. Rim diameter alone is not enough. Width, load range, and casing weight matter too.

The chart below gives you the usual landing spots that show up across common manufacturer sizing sheets. It’s not a blank check to ignore the exact tire size stamped on your sidewall. A 275/70R17 and a 37/12.50R17 can share the same rim diameter and still need different bead loads.

Tire Type Or Size Band Common Tire Examples Usual Bead Amount Per Tire
Small passenger tires 205/75R15, 215/70R16, 225/65R17 3 oz
Midsize car and small crossover tires 235/75R16, 245/75R16, 255/70R16 4.5 oz
Half-ton truck and larger SUV tires 275/65R17, 285/65R18, 33/12.50R15 6.5 oz
Large off-road and heavy light-truck tires 37/12.50R17, 10R17.5, 245/75R22.5 8.5 oz
Medium truck tires 11R22.5, 275/70R22.5, 295/75R22.5 10.5 oz
Heavier RV and commercial tires 12R22.5, 315/75R22.5, 11R24.5 13 oz
Large commercial tires 13R22.5, 345/75R22.5, 365/80R22.5 16 oz
Wide-base commercial tires 16R22.5, 425/65R22.5, 445/50R22.5 21 oz
Extra-wide commercial tires 18R22.5, 445/65R22.5, 495/70R24 23.5 oz

When The Number Needs To Go Up

Some tires ask for more than the plain chart line. Counteract’s sizing notes say dual wheel assemblies often need 2 extra ounces, and chunky off-road tread can need more bead weight than the 13-pound rule would suggest. That’s one reason two trucks with the same wheel diameter can end up with different bead amounts.

Bias-ply and heavy-ply tires also break the easy pattern. On the MAGNUM+ application chart, those tires move up one bag size from the listed amount. That step matters on trailers, work trucks, and old-school off-road setups where casing stiffness is part of the package.

The amount is only half the job. Bad installation can make the right number act like the wrong one. If moisture gets into the tire, if the valve core is not made for beads, or if bead material sticks where the tire seats on the rim, you can end up chasing a shake that has nothing to do with the ounce count.

Situation What To Do Why It Changes The Amount
Exact tire size appears on the chart Use the listed ounce amount The maker already matched that size to a bead load
Tire size is missing Use the 1 oz per 13 lb rule as a starting point It ties bead weight to the full tire-and-wheel assembly
Dual rear wheels Add the maker’s extra bead allowance The rotating assembly carries more mass
Mud-terrain or heavy all-terrain tread Use the higher amount the chart or maker notes call for Chunkier tread can bring more imbalance
Bias-ply or heavy-ply construction Step up one bag size when the maker calls for it Stiffer casing changes how the tire settles in motion
Wide-base commercial tire Stay with the large commercial bead pack size The casing is heavier and spread across more width

Installation Details That Change The Outcome

Dry Air And Clean Valve Parts Matter

Balance beads move inside the tire as it rolls, so they need a clean, dry path. If you’re feeding small bead loads through the valve stem, use the hardware the bead maker calls for. If you’re tossing a bag into an unmounted tire, keep the bead seat clean so the tire can seal the way it should.

TPMS adds another layer. Many bead makers say their products are sensor-safe, yet that still assumes correct installation, dry air, and the right valve parts. Sloppy work is where most bead headaches start.

Beads Do Not Fix Every Vibration

If a wheel is bent, a tire has run-out, or the wheel assembly has another hard fault, beads won’t make that vanish. They balance rotating mass inside the tire. They do not repair wheel damage or tire defects. So if the shake is still there after a correct install and a chart-matched bead load, check the wheel and tire before you dump in more beads.

Common Mistakes That Throw Off The Amount

Most bead problems trace back to a handful of misses:

  • Guessing by rim size alone: A 17-inch rim can wear many tire sizes, and those sizes do not all use the same ounce count.
  • Ignoring tread type: A highway tread and a mud tire in the same size may not land on the same real-world amount.
  • Skipping the wheel weight rule: If your size is not on the chart, the 13-pound rule beats a random guess.
  • Pouring beads through the wrong valve core: That can clog the valve and make air checks a pain.
  • Using beads to mask damage: If the tire or wheel is bad, the shake stays.
  • Adding more beads too soon: Start with the charted amount, drive, then judge the result.

Picking The Right Starting Amount

A clean way to choose the bead amount is to match your exact tire size on the maker’s chart first. If your size is there, use it. If it is not, use the tire-and-wheel weight rule, then check whether your setup falls into one of the usual step-up cases like duals, mud-terrain tread, or bias-ply construction.

For most drivers, that gets you close on the first try. Passenger tires often land at 3 ounces. Many light trucks and SUVs move to 4.5 or 6.5 ounces. Bigger truck and commercial tires rise from 8.5 ounces to well past 20. Start there, install them cleanly, and the bead load will match the tire instead of fighting it.

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