Complete wheel fitment specifications, compatible wheel sizes, and clearance guide
The 2024 Kia K5 comes standard with 225/50R17 tires mounted on 7.0 inches wide wheels with a +48mm offset. This setup is engineered for the K5's suspension geometry and provides adequate clearance to the fenders and suspension components at stock ride height. The bolt pattern is 5x114.3, shared across most Kia vehicles and many competitors in the Sedan segment.
The 2024 K5 has good flexibility for wheel upgrades. You can typically go larger in diameter while maintaining a similar overall tire diameter for accurate speedometer readings. Here are the general guidelines:
| Wheel Size | Tire Size | Width Range | Offset Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17 inches | 225/50R17 | 6.5–7.5" | +48mm to +55mm | Stock size, most flexibility |
| 18 inches | 235/50R18 | 7.0–8.5" | +40 to +50mm | Very popular, good fitment |
| 19 inches | 245/40R19 | 8.0–9.0" | +35 to +45mm | Tighter, requires clearance check |
| 20 inches | 255/35R20 | 8.5–9.5" | +30 to +40mm | Requires suspension work for safety |
The K5 community has standardized around a few proven wheel setups. Here are the most common configurations:
The 5x114.3 bolt pattern means the K5 has lug holes arranged in a circle with the specified diameter. This pattern is standard on Kia models and compatible with many vehicles across the Sedan segment. Wheels with 5x114.3 bolt patterns are abundant and relatively affordable, which is one reason the K5 platform is so popular for wheel upgrades.
Do not assume a wheel fits another car just because they share a bolt pattern. Offset, hub bore, and width still matter. A wheel that fits perfectly on a K5 might stick out or tuck in oddly on a competitor's platform.
Offset is the distance from the wheel's mounting face to the centerline of the wheel. On the K5, stock offset is +48mm, which tucks the wheels nicely under the fenders without interfering with suspension components.
Going more positive (+50mm or higher): The wheel tucks further under the fender. You get a more conservative, stock appearance. On the K5, wheels above +50mm will appear sunken and can reduce handling sharpness slightly due to increased scrub radius.
Going more negative (lower offsets): The wheel moves further outward. This creates a more aggressive, planted stance. On a stock-height K5, lower offset wheels will fit, but they'll be close to the fender. On lowered cars, you risk fender contact under compression or with aggressive driving.
Safe range for 2024 K5: +48mm to +55mm for stock-height cars. If you're running a suspension drop (1.5 inches or more), stay between +45mm and +55mm.
The 2024 K5 has adequate clearance from the stock tire to the fender at ride height on an unloaded car. This clearance is reduced under acceleration or when passengers are aboard and the suspension compresses.
Stock clearance: Ample. You can fit most popular upgrades without modification.
What fits without modifications: Wheels within 1 inch of factory diameter with appropriate offsets typically install without issues.
What requires fender rolling: Aggressive sizes on lowered cars. If you want extreme tires or wider wheels, a slight fender roll gives you the clearance you need. Never rub fenders under load—it damages paint and exposes bare metal to rust.
Every car is different based on suspension mods, ride height, and individual manufacturing tolerances. Use the WillItRub calculator to verify your specific wheel and tire combination before purchase.
Try the CalculatorA: Yes, going up one or two sizes (in diameter) is common. Stay within recommended offset ranges and verify clearance on lowered vehicles before purchase.
A: It indicates the number of lug holes and their pattern diameter. 5x114.3 is specific to Kia models and ensures proper wheel mounting. Always verify your vehicle's exact bolt pattern before purchasing wheels.
A: 67.1mm. This is the center hole on the wheel. Hub-centric wheels (with a center ring that fits the hub) are recommended but not required. Lug-centric wheels will work but can vibrate slightly until the lugs self-center.
A: With a 1.5-inch drop, stay between +48mm and +55mm. With a 2-inch drop, keep it at higher positive offset. For anything more aggressive, test-fit before buying or use a fitment calculator that accounts for your suspension height.
A: Hub-centric is better for vibration-free operation, but lug-centric wheels work fine if you torque the lug nuts to spec. Make sure the wheel sits evenly on all lugs.
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