Overall Diameter
+1.87 in
+7.50%
24.88 in26.74 in
205/55R16 vs 225/55R17: overall diameter changes by +1.87" (+7.50%), section width changes by +20 mm, sidewall height changes by +0.43", and static ground clearance shifts by about +0.93 in. Speedometer impact is about +7.50% at 60 mph indicated. This pair requires a different wheel diameter (16" → 17"). These figures are dimensional calculations only — they do not confirm vehicle fitment.
Side-by-side proportional comparison of Original tire 205/55R16 and New tire 225/55R17 on a shared ground baseline. Overall diameter 24.88" versus 26.74" (difference +1.87"). Section width 8.07" versus 8.86". Wheel diameter 16" versus 17".
Original
205/55R16
New
225/55R17
Comparison uses nominal dimensions calculated from the selected tire sizes. Actual manufacturer measurements may differ.
Overall Diameter
+1.87 in
+7.50%
24.88 in26.74 in
Section Width
+0.79 in
+9.76%
8.07 in8.86 in
Sidewall Height
+0.43 in
+9.76%
4.44 in4.87 in
Circumference
+5.86 in
+7.50%
78.16 in84.02 in
Speedometer Difference
+7.50%
+7.50%
60 mph64.5 mph true
Revolutions per Mile
−57
-6.98%
810.7754.1
Speedometer at selected speed
60 mph indicated ≈ 64.5 mph actual
Based on the selected vehicle-speed input.
Ground-clearance effect
Approximately +0.93"
Half of the overall diameter increase.
Sidewall behaviour
Taller sidewall
May increase flex and soften smaller impacts.
Effective gearing
Approximately +7.50% taller
Slightly fewer wheel revolutions per road mile.
Wheel requirement
17-inch wheel required
The original 16-inch wheel cannot be reused.
Installation complexity
Moderate verification required
Wheel, load, clearance and offset checks remain.
The ±3% diameter threshold is a comparison screen, not confirmed vehicle fitment.
Alternative sizes are dimensional comparisons only. Verify wheel width, load rating, offset and vehicle clearance.
This is a plus-size change from a 16" to a 17" wheel.
The 16" wheel cannot be reused for the 17" tire.
+7.50% diameter change is outside the site’s ±3% comparison threshold.
225/55R17 is taller than 205/55R16 (+1.87") and wider (+20 mm).
Sidewall height increases by 0.43"; static ground clearance increases by 0.93".
Theoretical road speeds: 30 indicated = 32.3 mph actual; 60 indicated = 64.5 mph actual; 75 indicated = 80.6 mph actual.
Revolutions per mile change −56.6 (-6.98%), producing taller effective gearing.
+7.50% is outside the site’s ±3% comparison threshold. Do not mix these sizes across driven axles unless the vehicle manufacturer specifies that combination.
24 indexed brand/model names exist in both sizes: BFGoodrich BFGOODRICH ADVANTAGE CONTROL, Falken AKLIMATE, Falken SINCERA SN250 A/S, Falken ZIEX ZE960 A/S, plus 20 more. Service descriptions and specifications can differ by size.

Highway Terrain
225/55R17 · 97T · Load Range SL

Highway Terrain
225/55R17 · 97V · 97H · Load Range SL

All-Terrain
225/55R17 · 101V · Load Range XL

Highway Terrain
225/55R17 · 97H

Highway Terrain
225/55R17 · 97V

Highway Terrain
225/55R17 · 97V · Load Range SL
Models shown are matched to exact-size records in TireReference's tire database. Availability and specifications may change; confirm with the manufacturer or retailer. Data and Calculation Standards
Common size upgrades from the Tire Reference database.
No. It performs a dimensional comparison of 205/55R16 and 225/55R17, not a complete vehicle fitment analysis.
Confirmed fitment still needs model year, trim, factory tire specification, wheel width, offset, bolt pattern, hub bore, brake clearance, suspension and fender clearance, plus load and speed-rating requirements.
What this tool can quantify from size (and published catalog fields when present): diameter difference (+7.50%), width difference (+20 mm), and wheel diameter requirement (16" → 17").
No approved rim-width range is listed for either size in this dataset, so rim fit must be confirmed from the specific tire maker’s documentation.
Load index and speed rating are not populated for both sizes in this dataset.
A diameter change within ±3% is only a common screening guideline — not a fitment guarantee for any specific vehicle.
Nominal tire dimensions for 205/55R16 and 225/55R17 are calculated from the tire-size code using standard geometric relationships, so the arithmetic for those nominal values is exact.
Real mounted tires can still differ because of tread design, approved measuring rim, inflation, load, remaining tread depth and casing construction.
For this pair, overall diameter moves +7.50% (24.88" → 26.74") and section width moves +20 mm (+9.76%).
This comparison is running on nominal size-code calculations for both 205/55R16 and 225/55R17. Prefer manufacturer-published overall diameter and revs/mile when you have selected a specific tire model.
Speedometer and gearing figures are theoretical: they assume the indicated speed is based on the original rolling circumference with no cluster recalibration.
For metric sizes, sidewall height equals section width × (aspect ratio ÷ 100), wheel diameter is converted with 1 in = 25.4 mm, and overall diameter equals wheel diameter plus two sidewalls.
Circumference is π × overall diameter, and revolutions per mile equal inches per mile divided by that circumference.
Applied here: 205/55R16 uses 205 mm width and aspect ratio 55 on a 16" wheel → 4.44" sidewall and 24.88" overall diameter; 225/55R17 works out to 4.87" sidewall and 26.74" overall diameter.
The width code is nominal section width, not tread width, and the aspect ratio is a percentage of that section width.
Yes — the larger rolling circumference on 225/55R17 travels farther per wheel revolution, so at a given indicated speed the vehicle typically moves slightly faster than the cluster shows.
Circumference changes +5.86" (+7.50%), which is the same percentage order as the diameter change for this geometric model.
At an indicated 60 mph, the theoretical road speed is approximately 64.5 mph (+7.50% versus 205/55R16).
Actual cluster behaviour can still differ after tire wear, load, temperature or any OEM speedometer calibration.
Yes for bead-seat diameter: 205/55R16 is an R16 tire and 225/55R17 is an R17 tire (+1" wheel change). An R16 tire will not correctly seat on an R17 wheel.
Plan a 17" wheel with appropriate width for 225 mm section width, then confirm offset, bolt pattern, hub bore, brake clearance and load rating on the target vehicle.
No approved rim-width range is listed for either size in this dataset, so rim fit must be confirmed from the specific tire maker’s documentation.
Only when wheel diameter matches, the rim width sits in the approved range for both tires, load and speed requirements are met, and the bead-seat type is compatible.
205/55R16 (R16) and 225/55R17 (R17) cannot use the same wheel diameter; an R16 tire and an R17 tire do not share a bead seat.
A wider tire does not automatically require a wider wheel, but mounting outside the published rim range can distort the tread profile and change handling and load behaviour.
No approved rim-width range is listed for either size in this dataset, so rim fit must be confirmed from the specific tire maker’s documentation.
Clearance must be checked through the suspension and steering travel, not only when the vehicle is parked on level ground.
Inspect full steering lock, suspension compression, inner sidewall to strut or control arm, outer shoulder to fender or liner, brake and wheel-barrel clearance, and tire growth/deflection under load — plus any wheel offset or width change.
For this pair, half the overall diameter change approximates the static radius or ground-clearance shift: about +0.93 in from the +7.50% diameter move (24.88" → 26.74").
Width change (+20 mm) spreads around the wheel centreline only when wheel width and offset stay unchanged; a different offset moves the whole package inward or outward.
Only when the vehicle manufacturer approves a staggered or mixed setup — do not create one casually from a comparison tool.
Mixing 205/55R16 and 225/55R17 across axles would put roughly +7.50% (+1.87") of rolling-circumference difference between front and rear if one size sat on one axle and the other on the opposite axle.
ABS, stability control and especially AWD/4WD systems can be sensitive to axle circumference mismatch; transfer-case and differential hardware may see extra stress, and tire rotation patterns become limited.
Follow the placard or OEM staggered specification. There is no universal “safe” percentage that applies to every drivetrain.
Two products sharing the 205/55R16 or 225/55R17 size code can still publish different overall diameters and revolutions per mile.
Measuring rim width, tread pattern, sidewall and casing construction, rated load and pressure, manufacturing tolerances, and new-versus-worn tread all shift the measured envelope.
Use the size-code geometry on this page for planning, then prefer the manufacturer’s published diameter and revs/mi for the exact model you intend to buy.
Nominal values come from the tire-size formula applied to the size code — for example 24.88" overall diameter on 205/55R16 and 26.74" on 225/55R17.
Published values come from physical measurement or manufacturer specifications for a specific brand and model, and can differ from that formula result.
Nominal figures are useful for generic size-to-size comparison; published figures are preferred for exact model-to-model analysis.
This comparison is running on nominal size-code calculations for both 205/55R16 and 225/55R17. Prefer manufacturer-published overall diameter and revs/mile when you have selected a specific tire model.
A larger rolling diameter on 225/55R17 produces taller effective gearing: fewer wheel revolutions per road mile and usually a small drop in engine RPM at a given true road speed.
revs/mi moves −57 (-6.98%). At 60 mph indicated, theoretical engine speed shifts with that circumference change — exact RPM also depends on final-drive ratio and transmission gear.
Acceleration response can feel slightly softer with taller gearing or sharper with shorter gearing; treat those effects as directional rather than certain for every powertrain.
Sidewall height sets how much vertical rubber is available to deflect under load.
For this pair sidewall changes +0.43" (4.44" → 4.87", +9.76%). Lower sidewalls generally reduce flex; taller sidewalls generally add compliance.
Construction, inflation pressure, load and tread design still matter — sidewall height alone does not determine handling or comfort.
Yes. The +7.50% nominal diameter difference is outside the site’s ±3% comparison threshold. Do not mix these sizes across driven axles unless the vehicle manufacturer specifies the combination.