How To Change A Tubeless Tire | No-Mess Bead Reset

Changing a tubeless bike tire means unseating the bead, cleaning the rim, fitting the new tire, adding sealant, and seating it fast with air.

Knowing how to change a tubeless tire saves shop time and makes mid-season tire swaps far less annoying. The job feels messy the first time because you are dealing with a tight bead, wet sealant, and rim tape all at once. Break it into clean steps and it settles down fast.

This article is for bicycle tubeless setups. If you are working on a car or motorcycle wheel, use the maker’s service method instead.

What you need before you start

Lay everything out before the wheel comes off the bike.

  • A new tubeless-compatible tire in the right size
  • Tire levers, ideally plastic
  • Fresh sealant
  • A floor pump or air charger
  • Valve-core tool
  • Clean rags or paper towels
  • Soapy water in a spray bottle

Check the sidewall and rim before you start. Tubeless, tubeless-ready, and tube-type parts are not the same thing, and the fit standards matter. ISO 5775-1:2023 separates tubeless, tubeless-ready, and tube-type bicycle tire designations, which is a good reminder not to force a random tire onto a random rim.

Before the tire comes off

Remove the wheel and set it on a towel or cardboard. Pull the valve to the top before you open the tire so pooled sealant does not pour straight out.

Deflate the tire all the way. Removing the valve core speeds up the last bit of air release and helps later when you need a fast blast of air to seat the tire again.

How To Change A Tubeless Tire Without A Sticky Mess

Step 1: Break the bead fully

Squeeze both sidewalls toward the center channel of the rim. Work all the way around on both sides until the bead feels loose. If one section still feels locked, press again instead of grabbing a lever too soon.

Step 2: Remove one bead first

Start opposite the valve. Hook one tire lever under the bead and roll it over the rim. Once a short section is out, the rest often peels off by hand.

Step 3: Catch and wipe the old sealant

Open the tire like a lid and wipe out clumps, dried latex, and grit from the tire bed and rim channel. If the tape is lifting, cut, wrinkled, or sliced near the spoke holes, fix that before the new tire goes on.

Step 4: Inspect the valve and tape

Check that the valve base still seals flat against the tape. If the lockring has backed off, snug it by hand. Specialized’s tubeless install notes also stress a clean, centered tape bed and a snug valve before inflation.

Item Why it matters What goes wrong if you skip it
Plastic tire levers Less chance of nicking rim tape or bead Metal edges can mark the rim bed and start leaks
Valve-core tool Lets you dump air fast in and out Slow airflow makes bead seating harder
Fresh sealant Seals tiny pores and small punctures Old sealant dries into lumps and leaves gaps
Soapy water Helps the bead slide into place Dry beads drag and stall before seating
Clean rag Removes latex, grit, and old residue Dirt under the bead can create slow leaks
Floor pump or air charger Delivers the burst needed to pop the bead up You may never get the tire to seat evenly
Correct tire size Matches the rim and bead shelf properly Too loose or too tight turns the swap into a fight
Healthy rim tape Keeps spoke holes airtight Air escapes through the rim before the bead can lock

Step 5: Mount the first bead of the new tire

Check the rotation arrow on the sidewall. Push one bead onto the rim by hand, starting opposite the valve. Keep the part already installed down in the center channel to create slack.

Step 6: Add sealant at the cleanest moment

Mount most of the second bead, leaving a gap near the top. Pour in the measured sealant through that opening, or inject it through the valve after seating if you prefer.

Two details that save time

Keep the open gap at the top while you pour. Then make sure the bead near the valve sits down in the center channel before you tackle the last tight section.

Step 7: Seat the bead with a fast hit of air

Spray a light mist of soapy water around both beads. Many riders leave the valve core out for the first inflation so air rushes in faster. Pump hard and fast and listen for sharp pops as the bead climbs onto the shelf.

Inspect the molded line near the rim on both sides. It should sit at an even height. If one section dips, deflate, massage that area into the center channel, wet the bead again, and retry.

Step 8: Spread the sealant and set riding pressure

Once the tire seats, rotate and shake the wheel so sealant reaches the full inner surface. Then set pressure for your riding style, staying below the lower of the tire or rim max. Leave the wheel flat on one side for a few minutes, flip it, and repeat.

Where most tubeless swaps go sideways

The hard part is rarely strength. It is sequence. People rush to the lever before the bead is fully broken, spill sealant because the valve sits at six o’clock, or blame the tire when the tape was already leaking.

If a brand-new tire still will not cooperate, check the basics again: correct size, true tubeless parts, smooth tape, snug valve, and enough air volume.

Problem Likely cause Best fix
Bead will not pop into place Not enough airflow or dry bead Remove valve core, add soapy water, use a faster air source
Air leaks around the valve Valve base not sealing on the tape Reset the valve and finger-tighten the lockring
Slow leak from spoke area Rim tape is cut, wrinkled, or off-center Retape the rim before trying again
Last section is too tight to mount Bead is not sitting in the center channel Walk both beads into the middle, then finish the last section
Sealant sprays out on inflation Gap left at the bottom or bead half-open Rotate the opening upward and close the bead before pumping
Tire looks uneven after inflation One bead section is hung up low on the rim Deflate, relube that area, and reseat it

When to replace more than the tire

A new tire is only part of the system. Swap the valve if the rubber base is cracked or permanently deformed. Replace tape if you can see cuts, lifting edges, or old sealant tracks sneaking under it. Toss dried-up sealant that looks like rubber skin or cottage cheese.

A clean finishing check

Before the wheel goes back in the bike, wipe the sidewalls, rim, and valve area. Spin the wheel and listen. No hiss, no wet bead line, and no wobble means you are done. After the first ride, check pressure again.

Once you have done this once or twice, changing a tubeless tire starts feeling like normal bike maintenance. The trick is staying tidy, keeping the beads in the center channel, and fixing the real leak source instead of fighting the tire harder.

References & Sources