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Tire Replacement Cost Calculator — 2026 New Tires Installed Price

Price a 2026 professional tire replacement by vehicle type, tire tier (economy → UHP), mount + balance fees, and alignment add-on — then line up ASE-certified installer bids.

Vehicle

Tires

Alignment

Location

Fill in the details and click Calculate

Fill in the details and click Calculate

What You'll Need

3 Ton Low Profile Floor Jack Heavy Duty Steel

3 Ton Low Profile Floor Jack Heavy Duty Steel

$80-$904.8
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BIG RED Torin Steel Jack Stands 3 Ton Pair

BIG RED Torin Steel Jack Stands 3 Ton Pair

$30-$454.6
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CARTMAN 18" Universal 4-Way Lug Wrench

CARTMAN 18" Universal 4-Way Lug Wrench

$10-$184.5
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AstroAI Digital Tire Pressure Gauge 150 PSI

AstroAI Digital Tire Pressure Gauge 150 PSI

$8-$124.5
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EPAuto 12V DC Portable Air Compressor Pump

EPAuto 12V DC Portable Air Compressor Pump

$30-$404.5
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DURATECH 8-Piece Oil Filter Swivel Wrench Set

DURATECH 8-Piece Oil Filter Swivel Wrench Set

$25-$354.5
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3 Ton Low Profile Floor Jack Heavy Duty Steel

3 Ton Low Profile Floor Jack Heavy Duty Steel

$80-$904.8
View on Amazon
BIG RED Torin Steel Jack Stands 3 Ton Pair

BIG RED Torin Steel Jack Stands 3 Ton Pair

$30-$454.6
View on Amazon
CARTMAN 18" Universal 4-Way Lug Wrench

CARTMAN 18" Universal 4-Way Lug Wrench

$10-$184.5
View on Amazon
AstroAI Digital Tire Pressure Gauge 150 PSI

AstroAI Digital Tire Pressure Gauge 150 PSI

$8-$124.5
View on Amazon
EPAuto 12V DC Portable Air Compressor Pump

EPAuto 12V DC Portable Air Compressor Pump

$30-$404.5
View on Amazon
DURATECH 8-Piece Oil Filter Swivel Wrench Set

DURATECH 8-Piece Oil Filter Swivel Wrench Set

$25-$354.5
View on Amazon

As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

How much does it cost to replace 4 tires in 2026?

A full 4-tire replacement typically runs $400–$1,800 all-in (tires + mount + balance + valve stems + disposal + tax). Economy all-seasons come in near $400–$700 out the door. Mid-range touring tires $700–$1,100. Premium performance tires $1,100–$1,800. Performance/SUV UHP sets regularly pass $2,000–$3,000 installed.

  • 4-tire economy set installed: $400–$700
  • 4-tire mid-range all-season: $700–$1,100
  • 4-tire premium performance: $1,100–$1,800
  • 4-tire UHP (sports/luxury SUV): $1,800–$3,000+
  • Alignment add-on: $80–$150 recommended on every new-tire install
Tire TierPer TireSet of 4 InstalledFits
Economy all-season$80–$150$400–$700Commuter sedans
Mid-range touring$120–$220$700–$1,100Family SUVs / sedans
Premium performance$200–$400$1,100–$1,800Sport sedans / crossovers
Ultra-high performance$300–$600$1,800–$3,000+Sports cars / luxury SUVs
Q

What is the install fee per tire — and what does it include?

Install fees run $15–$35 per tire at most shops. That covers the mount, computer road-force balance, a new rubber valve stem (TPMS kits add $5–$15), and tire disposal. Dealerships and tire chains sometimes bundle lifetime rotation + flat repair into a higher $20–$30 per-tire fee. Independent shops often go $15–$20 a tire with no bundle.

  • Mount + balance per tire: $15–$25
  • New rubber valve stem: included
  • TPMS service kit: +$5–$15 per sensor (optional if old ones ok)
  • Disposal fee: $2–$5 per tire (regulated in most states)
  • Lifetime rotation + flat repair: often bundled at $20–$30/tire shops
Q

Do I need an alignment when replacing tires?

Yes on most replacements — an alignment preserves your tire warranty and keeps mileage-rated tires from chewing through 50% of their tread in 20,000 miles. Alignment runs $80–$150 for a two-wheel or $100–$200 for a four-wheel (all-wheel-drive and performance cars). Skip only if your car tracks perfectly straight and tire wear was dead even on the old set.

  • 2-wheel alignment: $80–$150
  • 4-wheel alignment: $100–$200
  • Lifetime alignment plan: $200–$350 (5-year ROI if you replace tires once)
  • Skip if: old tires wore evenly, no pull, no pothole hits
  • Always do it if: pulling, uneven wear, new struts/tie rods, or performance car
Q

Is it cheaper to buy tires online and have them installed?

Often yes — Tire Rack, Discount Tire Direct, and SimpleTire ship for free and install partners charge $20–$30 a tire. Expect to save 10–25% vs walk-in dealer pricing on the same tire. Watch for: shipping hazmat surcharges on run-flats, mismatched install partner policies on road-hazard warranties, and the fact that your installer owes you nothing if the tire itself is defective.

  • Online savings vs dealer: 10–25% typical
  • Mount + balance at install partner: $20–$30 per tire
  • Road-hazard warranty: only valid through purchase channel
  • Run-flat + some UHP: may carry hazmat ship fee
  • Defective tire claims: handled by seller, not installer
Q

When do I have to replace all 4 tires instead of just 2?

Replace all 4 if you have all-wheel-drive (AWD center differential tolerance is usually within 2/32" tread variance), if remaining tread on the older pair is under 4/32", or if mixing tread patterns will leave the car unbalanced. Front-wheel-drive and rear-wheel-drive cars with 6/32"+ on the old pair can safely replace just the worn axle — always put the new pair on the rear axle for wet-weather stability.

  • AWD: always 4 at once (2/32" tread tolerance)
  • FWD/RWD with 6/32"+ old tread: replace pair on worn axle ok
  • New tires always go on REAR axle (hydroplane safety rule)
  • Under 4/32" on old pair: full-set time
  • Mismatched tread pattern/size: never mix
Q

What should I look out for when comparing tire shop quotes?

Ask for an out-the-door price that includes tires, mount, balance, valve stems, disposal, road-hazard warranty (optional), alignment, and shop-supply + tax. A quote that breaks out a $10 "shop supplies" fee and a $30 "nitrogen fill" fee can add $80 over the line item. Confirm the DOT date code is under 12 months old — tires sold more than 2 years after their DOT week are stale inventory.

  • Always get out-the-door (OTD) price, not base price
  • Line items to watch: shop supplies, nitrogen, TPMS
  • DOT date code: insist tires under 12 months old
  • Road-hazard warranty: $15–$30/tire (optional, often worth it)
  • Ask about rotation + flat repair — lifetime bundle vs per-visit fee

Example Calculations

1Mid-range all-season set on a family sedan

Inputs

Tires4 mid-range all-season
VehicleFamily sedan (e.g., Camry)
Alignment4-wheel alignment
ZIPDallas, TX

Result

Out-the-door estimate$820 – $1,200
Tires (4 x $160–$220)$640–$880
Mount + balance + stems + disposal$80–$120
Alignment$100–$180

A very typical "bread and butter" replacement: Michelin Defender, Continental TrueContact, or Goodyear Assurance MaxLife in a mid-$200 price range. Alignment is included in the quote.

2Premium performance set on a mid-size SUV

Inputs

Tires4 premium H/T
VehicleMid-size SUV (e.g., Grand Cherokee)
AlignmentIncluded
ExtrasRoad-hazard + TPMS service

Result

Out-the-door estimate$1,500 – $2,100
Tires (4 x $280–$380)$1,120–$1,520
Install + TPMS kits$120–$180
Alignment + hazard$200–$260

Larger 20" wheel sizing plus performance all-season rubber pushes the spend into $1,500–$2,100 territory. TPMS service kits add ~$40 across the set.

3UHP summer set on a sports coupe

Inputs

Tires4 UHP summer
VehicleSports coupe / performance car
Alignment4-wheel performance alignment
ExtrasRoad-force balance

Result

Out-the-door estimate$2,100 – $3,200
Tires (4 x $400–$650)$1,600–$2,600
Mount + road-force balance$140–$200
Performance alignment$180–$300

UHP summer tires like Michelin Pilot Sport 4S or Continental ExtremeContact Sport run $400–$650 apiece in common 19–20" sizing. Road-force balance is a must-have on these.

Formulas Used

Tire replacement total cost

Total = (Tire price × Count) + Install fees + Valve/TPMS + Disposal + Alignment + Tax

Total out-the-door cost is driven mostly by tire tier, but 15–20% of the ticket is install-and-align services. Budget 5% for the long tail of shop supply + state disposal + TPMS kits.

Where:

Tire price= Economy $80–$150, mid-range $120–$220, premium $200–$400, UHP $300–$600
Install per tire= Mount + balance + stem + disposal — $15–$35 each
TPMS service kit= Optional but recommended every 5–7 years: $5–$15/sensor
Alignment= 2-wheel $80–$150 or 4-wheel $100–$200 (skip only on perfectly even wear)
Tax + shop supplies= Sales tax + 3–5% shop fees + $2–$5/tire state disposal

Tire Replacement Costs in 2026: What Drivers Actually Pay

1

What a 2026 Tire Replacement Actually Costs

Replacing a full set of four tires in 2026 runs $400 to $1,800 out the door on most passenger cars, with performance cars and luxury SUVs regularly landing in the $1,800–$3,000+ band. The actual check written at the shop is driven overwhelmingly by tire tier — the $80 economy all-season and the $600 ultra-high-performance tire both fit the same mount-and-balance workflow, but the $520 per-tire spread on rubber is what separates a $500 ticket from a $3,000 one. Install-and-align services add $150–$400 on top of that regardless of tier.

This guide walks every line item on a tire-shop quote, the four tire tiers a driver sees on any installer’s website, and the service add-ons (TPMS kits, alignment, road-hazard warranty, nitrogen) that can add $80–$300 to an otherwise clean out-the-door price. Use the calculator above to build a personalized estimate. For a DIY sidebar on fitment and speedometer impact, pair with the tire size calculator; for timing the replacement around remaining tread depth, work through the tire wear calculator first.

2026 tire replacement out-the-door price ranges by scenario. Source: Tire Rack, Discount Tire, Costco published pricing.
Replacement ScenarioTypical OTDTire Tier Example
Economy commuter (4-tire)$400–$700Kumho, GT Radial, Cooper CS5
Mid-range all-season (4-tire)$700–$1,100Michelin Defender, Continental TrueContact
Premium touring/performance$1,100–$1,800Michelin CrossClimate, Pirelli Scorpion
Sports car UHP summer$1,800–$3,000+Michelin Pilot Sport 4S, Continental ECS
2-tire replacement (FWD/RWD)$250–$900Same tier, half the count

Out-the-door (OTD) is the only number that matters. A $109 sticker tire advertised at a chain becomes $175 installed after mount, balance, stem, disposal, shop supplies, and tax. Always ask the quote in OTD form before comparing shops.

2

The Four Tire Tiers Every Driver Sees

Every installer website clusters tires into four tiers, and matching your vehicle to the right tier is the single biggest cost lever on the quote. Economy all-seasons run $80–$150 per tire and fit commuter sedans, older vehicles, and anyone with less than 15,000 miles a year on the odometer — the tread life is shorter (45k–60k warranty) but the out-the-door check is half the price of the next tier up. Mid-range touring tires at $120–$220 per tire are the volume category — Michelin Defender, Continental TrueContact, Goodyear Assurance MaxLife — with 70k–80k mileage warranties and the best overall value equation for family sedans and crossovers.

Premium performance tires run $200–$400 per tire and are the right call on sport sedans, luxury SUVs, and any car spec’d with 19–20" wheels from the factory. Ultra-high-performance (UHP) summer tires at $300–$600 per tire are purpose-built for sports cars, performance coupes, and drivers who do track days or mountain drives — they lose grip below ~40°F and wear out in 20k–30k miles, but nothing else matches their dry handling. If your car came on UHP from the factory, staying on UHP is almost always the right call for resale value and safety.

The cheapest tire is almost never the lowest total cost. A $90 economy tire with a 50k warranty costs $0.00180 per mile. A $180 mid-range with an 80k warranty costs $0.00225 per mile — only 25% more on a per-mile basis for 60% more wet-grip performance.

  • Economy ($80–$150/tire): commuter sedans, seasonal second cars, 45k–60k warranty
  • Mid-range ($120–$220/tire): family cars, crossovers, 70k–80k warranty — the volume segment
  • Premium ($200–$400/tire): sport sedans, luxury SUVs, 19–20" OEM fitment
  • UHP ($300–$600/tire): sports cars, summer-only, 20k–30k tread life, track-capable
  • Tier downgrade: saves 20–35% but gives up 15–20k miles of warranty
  • Tier upgrade: adds 10–15% to sticker but usually recovers it on tread life
3

Install Line Items: What $15–$35 Per Tire Actually Buys

The install fee is where tire shops differentiate. Every quote includes a mount-and-balance line at $15–$35 per tire; that covers dismounting the old tire, mounting and computer-balancing the new one, a fresh rubber valve stem, and state-regulated tire disposal. TPMS (tire pressure monitoring) service kits — the rubber grommet and aluminum cap that surround the sensor — are an optional $5–$15 per sensor and are cheap insurance against a TPMS sensor failing in the next 18 months.

Higher per-tire install rates usually bundle in lifetime rotation and free flat repair — worth $200+ of value over the life of a tire set. Costco, Discount Tire, and Les Schwab all bundle lifetime rotation and flat repair; independent shops charge a la carte ($20 per rotation, $25 per flat repair). Nitrogen fill is a $30–$50 upsell that the tire industry itself says is optional on passenger cars — it is mandatory only on commercial aircraft and worthwhile mainly on cars that sit for months between drives. Shop supply fees (3–5% of the bill) and state tire disposal fees ($2–$5 per tire) are regulated and appear on every bill.

Expect road-force balance — a $10–$20 per-tire premium over standard spin balance — on any UHP or luxury install; it corrects wheel assemblies that pass a regular balance but still vibrate at highway speed because the tire itself is slightly out-of-round. If your quote does not itemize TPMS service kits, ask whether the shop will reuse existing sensors or replace them; a sensor that dies 6 months after a tire change is a $50–$100 dealer diagnostic plus a $75–$150 new sensor per wheel, and it is easier to budget $40 of TPMS kits up front. When you compare the gas mileage calculator numbers on a new-tire fuel-economy baseline, a properly balanced and aligned set will also recover 1–3% MPG versus worn, out-of-round tires running a little low on pressure.

  • Mount + balance + stem + disposal: $15–$35 per tire at most shops
  • TPMS service kit: $5–$15 per sensor (optional, every 5–7 years)
  • Lifetime rotation + flat repair: bundled at Costco, Discount Tire, Les Schwab
  • Nitrogen fill: $30–$50 optional upsell — skip on daily drivers
  • Road-force balance: $10–$20 premium per tire — required on UHP and luxury
  • State tire disposal fee: $2–$5 per tire, regulated
  • Shop supply charge: 3–5% of the bill, regulated in many states
4

Why Alignment Is Almost Always the Right Call

A $120 alignment is the single best insurance policy on a new-tire purchase. Alignment specs drift out of factory range within 20,000–30,000 miles through normal pothole hits, curb contacts, and suspension bushing wear — and tires with out-of-spec camber or toe wear through the warranty-rated tread life in half the miles. Skipping alignment on a $1,000 tire set to save $120 is a false economy: a 1° camber error can scrub 30% of rated tread life, turning an 80k-mile tire into a 55k-mile tire and costing you the equivalent of two extra tires over the ownership cycle. The gas mileage calculator shows the parallel fuel-economy hit from dragging tires.

The exception is a car with perfectly even wear on the outgoing set and no steering pull. If the old tires wore dead flat across the tread (inside and outside shoulders matched within 2/32") and the car tracked straight with hands off the wheel, skipping alignment is defensible. Performance cars, all-wheel-drive cars, and anything with recent strut or tie-rod work should always get an alignment — the $100–$200 on a four-wheel spec is trivial next to preserving the tire warranty.

4-tire replacement OTD cost by tier, 2026$0$800$1.6k$2.4k$3.2kEconomy$550Mid-range$900Premium$1.45kUHP$2.4kMid-point OTD by tire tier. Source: Tire Rack, Discount Tire 2026 pricing.
  • 2-wheel alignment: $80–$150 — suitable for most front-wheel-drive
  • 4-wheel alignment: $100–$200 — required for AWD, rear-wheel-drive, performance
  • Lifetime alignment plan: $200–$350 — ROI in 2 tire cycles
  • Skip if: perfectly even old-tire wear + no steering pull
  • Always do: AWD, performance, after strut/tie-rod work, pothole damage
  • Out-of-spec camber cost: 30% tread life loss per 1° error
5

Buying Online vs Buying at the Shop

Tire Rack, SimpleTire, and Discount Tire Direct ship free and partner with thousands of installers nationwide. The typical online savings is 10–25% versus walking into a dealership or brand-name chain for the same specific tire, and the install partners charge a published $20–$30 per tire for mount-and-balance. The math penciled out: a $180 mid-range tire at Tire Rack plus $25 install becomes $820 out the door on four, versus $950–$1,050 at a dealership for the same Continental TrueContact.

There are real trade-offs. Road-hazard warranty (against a non-repairable puncture or sidewall damage) is only valid through the purchase channel — buy online and you buy the warranty online; the installer does not cover it. Run-flats and some UHP tires carry a hazmat shipping surcharge because of the weight. And defective-tire claims go back through the online seller, not the installer — which matters if you hit a separation at 3,000 miles and need a free replacement. For daily drivers on mid-range rubber, the savings almost always justify the online-plus-install route. For UHP tires, staging a run-flat install, or anyone who wants a single throat to choke, the dealership bundle can be worth the extra $100–$200.

The out-the-door test still applies online. A $109 Tire Rack price becomes $164 OTD with install, valve stem, disposal, and tax. Compare OTD-to-OTD across online and in-shop options — that is where the 10–25% savings actually shows up.

  • Online savings vs walk-in: 10–25% on same specific tire
  • Install partner fee: $20–$30 per tire (published by Tire Rack, SimpleTire)
  • Road-hazard warranty: valid only through purchase channel
  • Hazmat ship fee: applies to some run-flats + UHP (~$25–$50)
  • Defective-tire claims: back through seller, not installer
  • Best for: daily drivers, mid-range tier, price-shopping on specific model
6

Red Flags When Choosing a Tire Installer

Tire installation is a commodity service but the execution varies. The single most important signal is whether the shop will give you a written OTD quote in under 5 minutes for a specific tire SKU. Shops that quote only "base" tire pricing and will not spell out mount, balance, stems, disposal, and alignment in writing are almost certainly padding the bill. Verify ASE certification on the tech who will mount your tires — it is a free trust signal displayed in every legitimate bay.

Watch out for stale DOT date codes. Every tire has a 4-digit week/year code stamped on the sidewall (e.g., "3623" = week 36 of 2023). Insist on tires manufactured within the last 12 months for daily drivers; the rubber compound starts curing on the shelf. Tires sold 2+ years after the DOT date are legal but compromised. Also avoid shops that insist on nitrogen fill as a required service — it is an optional upsell, period — and any quote where the alignment line is wildly underpriced ($40 or less) is either a bait-and-switch or using a broken Hunter rack that cannot hold spec.

  • Written OTD quote refused or delayed: walk away
  • Stale DOT date code (2+ years old): demand fresh stock
  • Nitrogen fill as mandatory: upsell, never required on passenger car
  • Alignment under $40: broken rack or bait-and-switch
  • No ASE-certified tire tech on site: trust signal missing
  • Pressure to buy road-hazard the day of: sleep on it
  • Dealer bundle with "lifetime" terms: read the fine print on rotation frequency

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Last Updated: Apr 19, 2026

This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.

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