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JSDC Wheels

Wheel Fitment Guide

Bolt patterns, decoded.

A wheel's bolt pattern — also called PCD (pitch circle diameter) — is the first thing to match when picking new wheels. Get it wrong and the wheel literally can't bolt on.

How to read a bolt pattern

A pattern like 5x114.3 means:

The wheel's bolt pattern must match the vehicle's lug-stud pattern exactly. A 5x114.3 wheel does not fit a 5x115 hub — the 0.7 mm difference is too much for the studs to line up cleanly. Some vehicles ship with adapters that allow alternate patterns; most don't.

Common patterns by manufacturer

Reference table for the Canadian market. Specific trims may vary — always confirm against the vehicle.

Pattern Common vehicles
5x114.3 Most common Japanese/Korean — Honda, Toyota (most models), Hyundai, Kia, Nissan, Mazda, some Ford, Tesla Model 3
5x100 Subaru, older Toyota Corolla, VW Golf, Audi A3, some Chrysler
5x112 VW, Audi, Mercedes-Benz, BMW (newer), Tesla Model Y
5x120 BMW (most), Land Rover, Tesla Model S/X
5x115 GM/Chevy (most cars), Dodge Charger/Challenger
6x139.7 (6x5.5") Toyota Tacoma, Tundra, 4Runner; Nissan Frontier, Titan; Chevy Colorado
6x135 Ford F-150 (2004+), Expedition
5x108 Volvo, Ford Focus, some Land Rover
4x100 Compact cars — Honda Fit, Toyota Yaris, older Civics, Mazda3

Pattern alone isn't enough

A matching bolt pattern means a wheel can be installed — not that it will fit well. Three other measurements matter:

The shortcut

Search by your vehicle on this site and we filter out every wheel that doesn't match your bolt pattern, hub bore, and OE offset range. No specs to memorise.

Browse wheels that fit your bolt pattern:

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