Tyre Dispatch - V4C Final Production
Quick Reference Chart

Tyre Pressure Chart — PSI & kPa Guide

Your tyre pressure is on the placard inside your driver's door jamb — not on the tyre itself. This is the quick-reference chart — for load-based calculations, temperature effects, and towing adjustments see the full PSI guide & calculator.

ColdAlways Check Cold
MonthlyCheck Frequency
1–2 PSINatural Loss/Month
32–36 ★Most Common NZ

📍 Where to Find Your Tyre Pressure

Your correct pressure is printed on a placard inside the driver's door jamb — not on the tyre sidewall. The number on the tyre (e.g. "Max 51 PSI") is the absolute maximum, not your recommended pressure.

205/55R16 91HTyre Size
33 PSIFront
30 PSIRear
36 PSIFull Load
⚠️ The tyre sidewall number is NOT your pressure. "Max 51 PSI" on your tyre is a structural limit for that tyre. Your vehicle's recommended pressure is almost always lower. Use the door placard or owner's manual values.

💨 PSI Quick-Reference Chart

Common pressure ranges by vehicle type. For exact pressure based on your load index, axle weights, and load range, use the full PSI calculator.

20
⚠️ Dangerously low
138 kPa
22
⚠️ Blowout risk
152 kPa
24
⚠️ Underinflated
165 kPa
26
Low end — some small cars
179 kPa
28
Small hatchbacks
193 kPa
30
Sedans, light load
207 kPa
32
★ Most common — sedans, SUVs
221 kPa
34
★ Most common — SUVs, crossovers
234 kPa
36
★ Common — SUVs, loaded cars
248 kPa
38
SUVs, XL tyres, full load
262 kPa
40
4WD, heavy SUV, max load
276 kPa
42
XL tyres at max, utes
290 kPa
44
Utes, LT tyres (Load Range C)
303 kPa
50
LT tyres — Load Range C max
345 kPa
65
LT tyres — Load Range D max
448 kPa
80
LT tyres — Load Range E max
552 kPa
Dangerously Low
Passenger
SUV / Loaded
XL / Heavy
LT / Commercial
Most Common NZ

📋 PSI → kPa → Bar Conversion

PSI kPa Bar PSI kPa Bar
26 179 1.79 38 262 2.62
28 193 1.93 40 276 2.76
30 207 2.07 42 290 2.90
32 221 2.21 44 303 3.03
34 234 2.34 50 345 3.45
36 248 2.48 65 448 4.48
ℹ️ Quick conversion: PSI × 6.895 = kPa  |  kPa × 0.145 = PSI  |  PSI × 0.0689 = Bar. Most NZ air pumps show both PSI and kPa.

🇳🇿 Typical NZ Vehicle Pressures

These are general ranges — always use your door placard value. For exact calculations based on your load index and axle weights, use the full calculator.

Vehicle Type Front PSI Rear PSI NZ Examples
Small hatchbacks 28–32 26–30 Yaris, Swift, Jazz, Demio
Sedans & crossovers 32–35 30–33 Corolla, Civic, CX-30, Impreza
Family SUVs 33–36 33–36 RAV4, CX-5, Outlander, X-Trail
Large SUVs & 4WDs 34–40 34–40 Prado, Patrol, Pajero Sport
Utes (LT tyres) 36–44 40–50 Hilux, Ranger, Navara, Triton
Vans & commercial 40–50 44–65 HiAce, Sprinter, NV350
ℹ️ Front vs rear difference: Front tyres usually run slightly higher pressure because the engine and steering components sit over the front axle. Utes often have much higher rear pressure when loaded because the rear is designed to carry payload.

📦 Load Adjustments

Load Situation Front Rear
Normal (1–2 passengers) Standard placard Standard placard
Full passengers (4–5 people) Standard +3–5 PSI
Light cargo (camping gear, luggage) Standard +3–5 PSI
Heavy cargo (building materials, moving house) +3 PSI +5–8 PSI
Max load / Towing Use "full load" value on placard (typically 38–44 PSI)
⚠️ Holiday blowout prevention: Underinflated tyres under heavy load are the main cause of holiday blowouts. The extra weight increases sidewall flexing → heat build-up → structural failure. Adding a few PSI for a loaded trip costs nothing and takes 2 minutes. The full calculator works out the exact pressure for your load.

❓ Why "Check Cold" Matters

Tyre pressure rises as you drive because friction and flexing generate heat. For every 5.5°C increase in tyre temperature, pressure rises by approximately 1 PSI. A tyre filled to 33 PSI on a cool morning can read 38+ PSI after a highway drive on a hot day.

"Cold" means: before driving, or at least 3 hours after stopping. If you must check after driving, expect readings 4–6 PSI higher than cold — but never release air from a hot tyre. You'll be underinflated when it cools.

Seasonal shifts: Tyres naturally lose 1–2 PSI per month through permeation. In winter, ambient temperature drops also reduce pressure. A tyre set to 33 PSI in autumn could be 28 PSI by mid-winter without any leak — just physics. This is why monthly checks matter.

📋 Key Rules

✅ The 5 golden rules: 1. Check cold — before driving or 3+ hours after stopping.   2. Check monthly — tyres lose 1–2 PSI naturally.   3. Never release air from hot tyres.   4. Increase for heavy loads — check placard for "full load" settings.   5. Don't forget the spare — it's useless if flat when you need it.
ℹ️ Underinflation vs overinflation: Underinflation is far more dangerous. 25% underinflation increases braking distance by ~10%, raises internal temperatures by ~15°C, and causes rapid shoulder wear. Overinflation is less risky but causes centre wear and a harsher ride. Both reduce tyre life — correct pressure maximises grip, wear, and fuel economy.

This Is the Quick-Reference Chart

Need exact pressure for your specific load index, axle weights, and load range? Want to understand ETRTO load/pressure tables, temperature compensation, or towing calculations? The full guide covers it all with an interactive calculator.

Written by Taylor Houghton — Tyre Dispatch LinkedIn

Taylor is the Director of Tyre Dispatch and Traction Tyres Ltd, operating from Te Puke, Bay of Plenty. As NZ's exclusive importer for Predator and Anchee tyres, Taylor combines hands-on workshop experience with deep technical research to make tyre buying less confusing for Kiwi drivers.

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