Borderline
Noticeable drift from OEM — drivable, but recalibration is wise.
Fitment comparison
265/35 R19 stands taller than 225/40 R18 — bigger rolling diameter, slightly more clearance, calmer cruise revs.
Going from 225/40 R18 to 265/35 R19 steps up to a 19-inch rim while trimming sidewall to stay near OEM rolling diameter. This tire combination moves rolling diameter well outside the usual OEM tolerance. The speedometer error is noticeable and may warrant a recalibration if you rely on indicated speed. The shorter sidewall gives the tire a firmer, more responsive feel and sharpens steering input. The 3–5% diameter gap puts this in caution territory: doable on many cars, but verify clearance and consider recalibration.
TakeCommon upgrade for sportier handling and a tighter wheel-gap look on the same vehicle.
Quick fitment verdict
Borderline
Noticeable drift from OEM — drivable, but recalibration is wise.
Likely rubs
Significantly wider/taller — rubbing risk on liners or fender lip is real.
+4.85%
Dash reads 104.8 km/h at a true 100 km/h — visible drift.
Aggressive
Geometry deviates enough to matter — confirm clearance before daily use.
Side-by-side telemetry
225/40 R18
265/35 R19
Real-world effects
Shareable card
Export a garage-grade telemetry card of this comparison — perfect for forums, Reddit and Discord.
Ride height
Chassis sits higher — slightly more clearance, wheel-gap visually grows.
New tire lifts the chassis by ~15.4 mm — more clearance, slightly more wheel-gap.
Suspension travel · arch clearance
Wheel gap
How the arch-to-tire gap reads from across the parking lot — the visual stance change everyone notices first.
225/40 R18
265/35 R19
Static · unloaded chassis
Fender relationship
The visual relationship between the tire's outer edge and the fender lip — the lens enthusiasts use to judge a fitment.
Tucked
Inside fender
Flush
Lip-aligned
Poke
Outside fender
Width & offset dependent
Speedometer reality
Taller rubber: at a true 100 km/h your dashboard reads optimistically high.
ABS · ESP · cruise control
Setup telemetry
Driver-perspective read-out of the 225/40 R18 → 265/35 R19 swap — steering, comfort, stance and dash behavior in plain enthusiast language.
Steering feel
+2.8 mm sidewallSidewall delta is small; the wheel will feel like the OEM setup at the rim.
Ride firmness
40% → 35%Comfort delta is below the perceivable threshold for most drivers.
Fender relationship
+40 mm widthWider tire pushes the contact patch outboard — flusher stance, but verify fender lip clearance at full lock.
Speedometer behavior
+4.85%Drift is visible at highway speeds; ABS still works but loses a sliver of precision.
Daily drivability
Ø +30.9 mmGeometry deviates enough to matter — check clearance, recalibrate the dash, then re-evaluate.
Direct answer
Borderline. Overall diameter changes by +4.85% versus 225/40 R18. Borderline. Drivable, but speedometer drift becomes noticeable and ABS calibration is affected.
Direct answer
Possibly. Width changes by +40 mm and diameter by +30.9 mm. Possible rub at full lock or full suspension compression — verify fender lip and inner strut clearance before committing.
Direct answer
Yes — by +4.85%. Swapping 225/40 R18 for 265/35 R19 changes overall diameter, so at an indicated 100 km/h your true speed becomes 104.8 km/h. That's noticeable drift but usually safe.
Direct answer
Yes — softer ride. Sidewall changes by +2.8 mm (40% → 35%). Ride softens and absorbs bumps better, with slightly less precise turn-in.
Current Tire
New Tire
Fitment · Scaled comparison
● Borderline
Diameter
+30.9 mm
+4.85%
Sidewall
+2.8 mm
Speedometer
104.8 km/h
at true 100
Clearance
Borderline
Ground line · Scaled comparison
Slight Difference
Within ±5% — usable, recalibration recommended
Diameter change
+30.9 mm
4.85%
Speedometer at 100
104.8 km/h
+4.85% error
Ground clearance
+15.4 mm
ride height delta
Sidewall change
+2.8 mm
revs/km: 476.4
Permalink for this comparison:
/compare/225-40-r18-vs-265-35-r19| Metric | 225/40 R18 | 265/35 R19 | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall diameter | 637.2 mm | 668.1 mm | +30.9 mm (+4.85%) |
| Sidewall height | 90.0 mm | 92.8 mm | +2.8 mm |
| Circumference | 2.002 m | 2.099 m | +97.1 mm |
| Revs / km | 499.5 | 476.4 | -23.1 |
| Ground clearance | reference | +15.4 mm | +15.4 mm |
| Speedometer @ 100 km/h | 100.0 km/h | 104.8 km/h | +4.85 km/h |
Between 3% and 5% — noticeable speedometer drift; recalibration may be advisable.
Scaled engineering side-profile of both tires. Width, sidewall and overall diameter are dimensioned so you can see the change at a glance — without parsing the numbers.
Current
225/40 R18New
265/35 R19Current
225/40 R18New
265/35 R19Steering response
Sharper turn-in
Ride comfort
Harsher impacts
Road noise
Louder on coarse asphalt
Wet / aquaplaning
Reduced standing-water margin
Fuel economy
Small MPG penalty likely
Curb / pothole protection
Higher wheel-damage risk
Width jump >20 mm — verify fender lip and inner liner clearance at full lock.
Wider tire may contact strut or control arm on full compression.
~4.8% — borderline; recalibration recommended.
Cluster preview
BorderlineAt a true 100 km/h, your dashboard will read 104.8 km/h after switching to 265/35 R19 — a +4.85% offset. Use the speedometer error calculator for any indicated speed, and the speedometer error guide for the full background.
The new tire's half-diameter changes ride height by +15.4 mm. Small differences are absorbed by suspension travel, but anything beyond ±10 mm can affect headlight aim, fender clearance and bump-stop margin. See the plus-sizing guide before committing.
Back to
225/40 R18
Back to
265/35 R19
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