How To Reset Tire Maintenance On Nissan Rogue | Clear It

A Rogue tire maintenance reminder clears after you reset the tire interval in the Settings and Maintenance menu.

The Nissan Rogue tire maintenance message is usually a service reminder, not a flat-tire warning. In plain terms, the SUV is telling you it has reached the mileage you set for tire work like rotation, inspection, or replacement.

That means the fix is usually short. Do the tire work if it is due, then reset the tire item in the display menu. On most Rogue models, the whole job takes less than a minute once you know where Nissan put the setting.

How To Reset Tire Maintenance On Nissan Rogue Through The Display Menu

These steps fit most Rogue models that use the instrument-cluster settings screen. The wording can change a bit by model year, yet the path stays close.

  1. Park the Rogue and switch the ignition to ON.
  2. Use the steering-wheel arrows or scroll dial to open Settings in the vehicle information display.
  3. Select Maintenance.
  4. Select Tire.
  5. Choose Reset, or set the mileage back to the interval you want.
  6. Confirm the change, then back out and make sure the message is gone.

Nissan’s menu wording makes this pretty clear. On Rogue models with this setup, the Maintenance screen includes a Tire item that can be set to a mileage interval or reset after service.

Reset It After The Tire Work, Not Before

If the reminder came on because you just hit the rotation interval, do the tire work first. Then reset the reminder. If you clear it before the rotation happens, the counter starts over even though the tires still have not been serviced.

What The Nissan Tire Reminder Is Actually Tracking

Rogue owners often mix up two different warnings. One is the maintenance reminder for tire service. The other is the low-pressure system that watches air pressure. They are not the same alert, and they do not clear the same way.

If you want Nissan’s own wording, the 2020 Rogue owner’s manual says the Tire item under Maintenance can be set or reset. Nissan’s Rogue tire service intervals page says tire rotation is due every 5,000 miles. Put those together and the message makes more sense: the car is flagging a mileage-based service timer, not measuring tread depth on its own.

That is why the reminder can show up even when the tires still look fine. The system is counting miles since the last reset. It is not checking tread wear, sidewall damage, or alignment by itself.

Alert Or Situation What It Means What To Do
Maintenance Tire Mileage reminder for tire service Rotate or inspect the tires, then reset the Tire item in Maintenance
Tire Pressure Low – Add Air One or more tires are under the target cold pressure Inflate to the door-jamb pressure label, then drive a short distance
Low tire pressure light stays on The air issue is still there, or the system has not updated yet Recheck all four tires when cold and make sure none are still low
Flat tire warning A tire may be too low to keep driving on Stop, inspect the tire, and repair or replace it before touching the reminder
Tire Size Incorrect The vehicle sees a tire-size mismatch or a related issue Check that all four road tires match in size and pressure
After a tire rotation The service was done, yet the timer was not cleared Go back to Settings > Maintenance > Tire and reset it
After adding air on a cold morning You fixed a pressure problem, not the service timer Only reset the maintenance item if the screen is a tire-service reminder
After battery work The interval setting may still be active Check the Tire menu and set the distance again if needed

When The Warning Will Not Clear

If you reset the Tire item and the message still shows up, the first thing to sort out is which warning you are seeing. A maintenance reminder can be reset from the menu. A low-pressure warning cannot be fixed with a menu reset. It needs the tires inflated to the proper cold pressure.

You May Be Clearing The Wrong Screen

Nissan uses similar tire-related wording across the display, and that trips people up. If the screen mentions service, maintenance, or a mileage interval, reset the Tire reminder. If it mentions low pressure or add air, grab a gauge and check the tires before you do anything else.

Air Pressure Warnings Need A Different Fix

On Rogue models with TPMS, the low tire pressure light does not shut off the instant you add air. After the tires are set to the correct cold pressure, the vehicle may need a short drive before the system updates and the warning goes out. That is normal.

Also, do not trust a quick eyeball check. One tire can be low enough to trigger the light while still looking close to normal. Check all four tires, not just the one that looks soft.

What You See Likely Cause Next Move
Maintenance Tire stays on after reset The reset was not confirmed Go back into the Tire menu and finish the reset again
Message comes back the next day The interval was set too short Reset it again and choose a mileage that fits your tire service plan
Low tire pressure light stays on A tire is still low or the system has not updated yet Check cold PSI, correct it, then drive briefly
One tire keeps losing air Puncture, valve leak, or wheel leak Repair the leak before worrying about the reminder
Rogue pulls left or right Alignment or uneven wear Get the tires inspected; a reset will not fix that
No Tire menu where you expect it Menu wording differs by year or trim Check the Settings screen again and look for Maintenance in the cluster menu

A Good Mileage To Set After The Reset

A lot of Rogue owners set the reminder to 5,000 miles because that matches Nissan’s tire rotation interval on the Rogue maintenance page. That is a solid default if you want a clean, easy number to remember.

You can also go shorter if your driving is hard on tires. Rough roads, heavy loads, lots of stop-and-go use, and long hot-weather runs can all make tire wear show up sooner. In that case, a shorter reminder can keep the rotation from slipping your mind.

Common Mistakes That Cause Confusion

The biggest mistake is treating every tire alert like the same thing. A maintenance reminder is a timer. A TPMS light is a pressure warning. One clears in the menu. The other clears after the pressure problem is fixed and the system updates.

  • Resetting the reminder after adding air, even though no tire service was done
  • Ignoring the cold-pressure label on the driver-door jamb and guessing the PSI
  • Resetting the counter, then forgetting to set the next interval
  • Assuming the message means the tires are worn out right now
  • Missing a slow leak and blaming the display instead

Another easy miss is uneven wear. If the message came on right when the Rogue starts to vibrate, wander, or pull, do not stop at a reset. Get the tires checked. The reminder may have done its job by nudging you to catch a wear issue before it gets more expensive.

A Clean Reset Comes Down To Two Checks

Split the job into two parts and the whole thing gets easier. First, ask whether the Rogue is asking for tire service or warning about low pressure. Next, do the matching fix. For service, reset the Tire item in Maintenance. For low pressure, set the tires to the right cold PSI and drive a short distance so the system can update.

Once you do that, the Rogue’s tire message stops feeling mysterious. It is just a mileage timer on one screen and an air-pressure warning on another. Know which one you are looking at, and the reset becomes straightforward.

References & Sources