Within ±3%
Inside factory tolerance — ABS, ESP and cruise control stay calibrated.
Fitment comparison
295/30 R22 is shorter than 235/65 R17 — quicker gearing feel, tighter arch gap, livelier throttle response.
Plus-sizing from 235/65 R17 to 295/30 R22 keeps overall diameter close to factory while opening room for a larger 22-inch wheel. This wheel and tire pairing preserves rolling diameter within a hair of the original. The dashboard reading stays essentially unchanged from the OEM calibration. Less sidewall flex usually translates to crisper turn-in and a slightly stiffer ride over rough pavement. Diameter change stays inside the conservative ±3% safety window — an OEM-safe fitment on most vehicles.
TakeA solid pick for drivers chasing a more aggressive stance without abandoning OEM rolling diameter.
Quick fitment verdict
Within ±3%
Inside factory tolerance — ABS, ESP and cruise control stay calibrated.
Likely rubs
Significantly wider/taller — rubbing risk on liners or fender lip is real.
-0.20%
At a true 100 km/h the dash reads 99.8 km/h — negligible.
Livable
Daily use is fine; expect a slightly different ride and cruise rev count.
Side-by-side telemetry
235/65 R17
295/30 R22
Real-world effects
Shareable card
Export a garage-grade telemetry card of this comparison — perfect for forums, Reddit and Discord.
Ride height
Chassis drops — tighter arch gap, more aggressive stance.
New tire drops ride height by ~0.8 mm — tighter arch gap, lower stance.
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.
235/65 R17
295/30 R22
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
Shorter rubber: dashboard reads conservatively low — you're slower than it claims.
ABS · ESP · cruise control
Setup telemetry
Driver-perspective read-out of the 235/65 R17 → 295/30 R22 swap — steering, comfort, stance and dash behavior in plain enthusiast language.
Steering feel
-64.3 mm sidewallShorter sidewall transmits inputs faster — quicker turn-in, more confident on-center feel.
Ride firmness
65% → 30%Expect more chatter on broken tarmac and a sharper pothole strike — keep an eye on wheel damage risk.
Fender relationship
+60 mm widthWider tire pushes the contact patch outboard — flusher stance, but verify fender lip clearance at full lock.
Speedometer behavior
-0.20%Inside the factory ±3% tolerance — ABS, ESP and cruise control behave as designed.
Daily drivability
Ø -1.5 mmDaily use is fine; expect a slightly different cruise rev count and a touch more road feel.
Direct answer
Yes. Overall diameter changes by -0.20% versus 235/65 R17. OEM-safe. Speedometer, ABS, ESP and gearing remain inside the factory tolerance.
Direct answer
Possibly. Width changes by +60 mm and diameter by -1.5 mm. Possible rub at full lock or full suspension compression — verify fender lip and inner strut clearance before committing.
Direct answer
Yes — by -0.20%. Swapping 235/65 R17 for 295/30 R22 changes overall diameter, so at an indicated 100 km/h your true speed becomes 99.8 km/h. That's within the ±3% OEM tolerance — no recalibration needed.
Direct answer
Yes — firmer ride. Sidewall changes by -64.3 mm (65% → 30%). Ride becomes firmer and steering sharper, but potholes and expansion joints hit harder and wheel damage risk rises.
Current Tire
New Tire
Fitment · Scaled comparison
● Excellent fit
Diameter
-1.5 mm
-0.20%
Sidewall
-64.3 mm
Speedometer
99.8 km/h
at true 100
Clearance
Excellent fit
Ground line · Scaled comparison
Excellent Fit
Within ±3% — safe for daily driving
Diameter change
-1.5 mm
-0.20%
Speedometer at 100
99.8 km/h
-0.20% error
Ground clearance
-0.8 mm
ride height delta
Sidewall change
-64.3 mm
revs/km: 432.6
Permalink for this comparison:
/compare/235-65-r17-vs-295-30-r22| Metric | 235/65 R17 | 295/30 R22 | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall diameter | 737.3 mm | 735.8 mm | -1.5 mm (-0.20%) |
| Sidewall height | 152.8 mm | 88.5 mm | -64.3 mm |
| Circumference | 2.316 m | 2.312 m | -4.7 mm |
| Revs / km | 431.7 | 432.6 | +0.9 |
| Ground clearance | reference | -0.8 mm | -0.8 mm |
| Speedometer @ 100 km/h | 100.0 km/h | 99.8 km/h | -0.20 km/h |
Within ±3% — speedometer, ABS and traction control should behave normally.
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
235/65 R17New
295/30 R22Current
235/65 R17New
295/30 R22Steering 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.
Cluster preview
Within toleranceAt a true 100 km/h, your dashboard will read 99.8 km/h after switching to 295/30 R22 — a -0.20% 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 -0.8 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
235/65 R17
Back to
295/30 R22
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