Yes, some wheels wearing 235 tires can also take 245s, though wheel width, clearance, and tire diameter still need a fitment check.
People say “235 rims” all the time, but a rim is not sized that way. In garage talk, that phrase usually means a wheel that now has 235 tires on it. The answer hangs on the wheel’s width, the tire’s full size, the wheel offset, and the room inside the fender and suspension.
A jump from 235 to 245 adds 10 mm of section width on paper. On the car, that often means about 5 mm farther inward and 5 mm farther outward if the wheel width and offset stay the same. That sounds small, yet small changes are enough to cause rubbing on struts, liners, or fender lips.
So yes, the swap can work. But it is not automatic. If you want the short rule, keep the wheel within the new tire’s approved width range, keep the load and speed ratings at or above what the car calls for, and keep the overall diameter close to stock.
What “235 Rims” Usually Means
Wheels are measured by diameter and width, such as 18×8 or 19×8.5. Tires are measured by section width, aspect ratio, and wheel diameter, such as 235/45R18. Once you split those two things apart, the fitment question gets easier.
If your wheel is 8 inches wide and your current tire is a 235/45R18, a 245/45R18 may fit that same wheel if the tire maker allows it. If your wheel is narrow, the new tire can bulge too much. If your wheel is wide, the old 235 may already be near its limit and the 245 may fit better.
Putting 245 Tires On Rims That Now Wear 235s
The cleanest way to judge the swap is to read the full size on the current tire, then compare the new size line by line. Width is only one part. The aspect ratio and wheel diameter decide sidewall height and overall diameter, which then change gearing feel, fender room, and speedometer reading.
Michelin’s tire size advice points drivers to the vehicle placard and maker specs when replacing tires. That is the safest starting point. If the car left the factory with only 235-width options, there may be a clearance reason for that, not just a pricing choice.
Next, check the tire maker’s approved rim width for the exact 245 size you want. One Goodyear 245/40R18 spec page lists an approved 8.0 to 9.5 inch rim range. That kind of spec tells you more than the old 235 label ever will.
| Check | What You Compare | What A Good Result Looks Like |
|---|---|---|
| Wheel width | Current wheel width vs approved width for the new 245 tire | The wheel sits inside the tire maker’s listed range |
| Wheel diameter | Rim diameter in inches | It matches the new tire exactly, such as 18-inch tire on 18-inch wheel |
| Overall diameter | Old tire height vs new tire height | The new tire stays close to stock so speed and clearance stay sane |
| Load index | Door placard or old tire vs new tire | The new tire meets or exceeds the car’s requirement |
| Speed rating | Placard or old tire vs new tire | The new tire is not a step down |
| Inner clearance | Distance to strut, spring perch, and liner | You still have room after the extra width goes inward |
| Outer clearance | Distance to fender lip during turns and compression | The extra width does not touch on lock or over bumps |
| Wheel offset | Existing offset and any spacer or wheel change | The tire stays centered enough to avoid inside or outside rub |
When The Swap Usually Works
A move from 235 to 245 often goes smoothly when the car already came with both sizes across trims, the wheel is at least 8 inches wide, and the new tire keeps the same wheel diameter with a close overall height. That setup tends to give a touch more tread width without turning the car into a fitment project.
You may also notice a slightly fuller sidewall shape on the same wheel. Some drivers like that look and the small bump in straight-line grip. The tradeoff is that steering response can feel a bit softer if the wheel is on the narrow end for the new tire.
When The Swap Goes Wrong
The common trouble spots are easy to spot once you know where to look:
Where Rubbing Starts
Rubbing usually shows up in three places: the inner sidewall near the strut, the liner near full steering lock, or the outer shoulder when the suspension compresses. A car that looks fine in the driveway can still kiss the liner in a parking garage ramp or over a dip with passengers on board. That is why a static glance is not enough.
- A narrow wheel pinches the new tire and makes the sidewall roll more in corners.
- The extra width hits the strut or inner liner at full lock.
- The outer shoulder brushes the fender over dips or with passengers in the car.
- A taller overall tire throws the speedometer and odometer off more than you expect.
- Front and rear staggered setups lose their factory balance if you change only one end.
Size Math That Changes The Answer
Say your car now runs 235/45R18 and you are eyeing 245/45R18. The width grows by 10 mm, and the sidewall grows too because 45 percent of 245 is taller than 45 percent of 235. That makes the whole tire taller, not just wider. On many cars that still lands inside a usable window, yet it is not the same as a pure width swap.
If you want a near-stock diameter, people often change the aspect ratio at the same time. A 235/45R18 to 245/40R18 swap keeps height much closer. The width still grows, so the clearance check stays on the list.
Why Matching Diameter Matters
Diameter changes affect more than the speedometer. They can change the gap at the fender, the way the transmission holds a gear, and the feel at turn-in. On cars with tight electronic calibration, a mild size jump is usually fine, while a big jump can feel off even before you hear a rub.
| Old Size To New Size | Diameter Change | Plain-English Read |
|---|---|---|
| 235/45R18 to 245/45R18 | About +0.35 in | Wider and taller; common swap, but check fender room |
| 235/45R18 to 245/40R18 | About -0.03 in | Width goes up while height stays close to stock |
| 235/40R18 to 245/40R18 | About +0.31 in | Wider and taller; often fine on roomy cars |
| 235/40R18 to 245/35R18 | About -0.37 in | Width goes up, sidewall gets shorter, ride gets firmer |
| 235/55R18 to 245/55R18 | About +0.43 in | Good chance of extra bulk; check SUV and crossover room |
Four Checks Before You Order
- Read the wheel width stamped on the wheel or pull it from the wheel spec sheet.
- Read the full tire size on the sidewall, not just the 235 width.
- Compare the new tire’s approved rim width, load index, and speed rating.
- Turn the steering to full lock and inspect room at the strut, liner, and fender.
Best Answer For Most Drivers
If your wheels are within the new tire’s approved range and your car has enough room, putting 245 tires on wheels that used to wear 235s is often fine. If your wheels are narrow or the car already runs tight clearances, stay with 235 or choose a 245 size with a shorter sidewall that keeps diameter closer to stock.
The biggest mistake is treating “235 rims” like a real wheel spec. It is not. Get the wheel width, offset, full tire size, and placard data in front of you, then make the call. Do that, and you will know whether the 245 swap is a smart fit or a rub waiting to happen.
References & Sources
- Michelin.“Choosing the Right Tire Size for Your Vehicle.”Explains how to use the vehicle placard and maker size specs when replacing tires.
- Goodyear.“Eagle F1 SuperCar 3.”Shows an approved 8.0 to 9.5 inch rim range for one 245/40R18 tire, which helps judge wheel fitment.
