Quick verdict
Do not treat this as a universal winner-and-loser decision. Compare the tire size, wheel setup, axle position, load, route, weather, maintenance discipline, retread plan, installed cost, and supplier availability before requesting a quote.
Side-by-side comparison
When each option makes sense
When to choose 11R22.5
Choose 11R22.5 only when the wheel, rim size, load rating, loaded radius, clearance, speed rating, dual spacing, and fleet standardization plan all support it. Size substitutions should be confirmed before purchase, especially when tractors and trailers may be mixed across units.
When to choose 295/75R22.5
Choose 295/75R22.5 only when the wheel, rim size, load rating, loaded radius, clearance, speed rating, dual spacing, and fleet standardization plan all support it. Size substitutions should be confirmed before purchase, especially when tractors and trailers may be mixed across units.
Common mistakes
- Comparing tire-only price without installation, disposal, casing credit, freight, taxes, or downtime.
- Ignoring axle position and treating steer, drive, trailer, and all-position tires as interchangeable.
- Switching tire sizes without checking wheel, load rating, clearance, dual spacing, and speed rating.
- Buying a brand or price tier before confirming the exact model, route type, and local availability.
Quote checklist
- Tire size, axle position, quantity, ZIP code, truck type, and application.
- Current tire model, reason for replacement, timeline, and whether the truck is down.
- New, retread, used, premium, mid-tier, or budget preference.
- Installation, mobile service, roadside need, financing interest, and fleet billing requirements.
This comparison is educational. Tire fitment, load capacity, speed rating, and position suitability must be verified by a qualified commercial tire professional.
Request a comparison-based quote