Borderline
Noticeable drift from OEM — drivable, but recalibration is wise.
Fitment comparison
225/45 R18 stands taller than 225/45 R17 — bigger rolling diameter, slightly more clearance, calmer cruise revs.
225/45 R18 is a plus-1 alternative to 225/45 R17 — the bigger wheel shows through a thinner sidewall. This wheel and tire pairing noticeably changes overall diameter compared to OEM. Visually, the bigger wheel fills the arch and gives the car a more aggressive stance.
The speedometer error is noticeable and may warrant a recalibration if you rely on indicated speed. 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.
+4.00%
Dash reads 104.0 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
225/45 R17
225/45 R18
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 ~12.7 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.
225/45 R17
225/45 R18
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 225/45 R17 → 225/45 R18 swap — steering, comfort, stance and dash behavior in plain enthusiast language.
Steering feel
+0.0 mm sidewallSidewall delta is small; the wheel will feel like the OEM setup at the rim.
Ride firmness
45% → 45%Comfort delta is below the perceivable threshold for most drivers.
Fender relationship
+0 mm widthWidth delta is too small to change stance — same visual signature as OEM.
Speedometer behavior
+4.00%Drift is visible at highway speeds; ABS still works but loses a sliver of precision.
Daily drivability
Ø +25.4 mmGeometry deviates enough to matter — check clearance, recalibrate the dash, then re-evaluate.
Direct answer
Borderline. Overall diameter changes by +4.00% versus 225/45 R17. Borderline. Drivable, but speedometer drift becomes noticeable and ABS calibration is affected.
Direct answer
Possibly. Width changes by +0 mm and diameter by +25.4 mm. Possible rub at full lock or full suspension compression — verify fender lip and inner strut clearance before committing.
Direct answer
Yes — by +4.00%. Swapping 225/45 R17 for 225/45 R18 changes overall diameter, so at an indicated 100 km/h your true speed becomes 104.0 km/h. That's noticeable drift but usually safe.
Direct answer
Barely. Sidewall changes by +0.0 mm (45% → 45%). Comfort is essentially unchanged.
Current Tire
New Tire
Fitment · Scaled comparison
● Borderline
Diameter
+25.4 mm
+4.00%
Sidewall
+0.0 mm
Speedometer
104.0 km/h
at true 100
Clearance
Borderline
Ground line · Scaled comparison
Slight Difference
Within ±5% — usable, recalibration recommended
Diameter change
+25.4 mm
4.00%
Speedometer at 100
104.0 km/h
+4.00% error
Ground clearance
+12.7 mm
ride height delta
Sidewall change
0.0 mm
revs/km: 482.5
Permalink for this comparison:
/compare/225-45-r17-vs-225-45-r18| Metric | 225/45 R17 | 225/45 R18 | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall diameter | 634.3 mm | 659.7 mm | +25.4 mm (+4.00%) |
| Sidewall height | 101.3 mm | 101.3 mm | 0.0 mm |
| Circumference | 1.993 m | 2.073 m | +79.8 mm |
| Revs / km | 501.8 | 482.5 | -19.3 |
| Ground clearance | reference | +12.7 mm | +12.7 mm |
| Speedometer @ 100 km/h | 100.0 km/h | 104.0 km/h | +4.00 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
225/45 R17New
225/45 R18Current
225/45 R17New
225/45 R18Steering response
Similar feel
Ride comfort
Comparable
Road noise
Similar cabin noise
Wet / aquaplaning
Comparable wet behavior
Fuel economy
Small MPG penalty likely
Curb / pothole protection
About the same
~4.0% — borderline; recalibration recommended.
Cluster preview
BorderlineAt a true 100 km/h, your dashboard will read 104.0 km/h after switching to 225/45 R18 — a +4.00% 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 +12.7 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
225/45 R17
Back to
225/45 R18
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