Wheel Bolt Patterns
A bolt pattern (also called a PCD — pitch circle diameter) tells you two things: how many lug holes the wheel has, and the diameter of the circle they sit on. Write it as “5x114.3” and it means five lugs on a 114.3mm circle. Get either number wrong and the wheel won’t bolt on — full stop. This reference covers every bolt pattern in our fitment database, with the exact vehicles and wheels that share each one.
10 bolt patterns
Browse by bolt pattern
5x114.3
31 vehicles · 8 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →5x112
14 vehicles · 4 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →6x139.7
13 vehicles · 8 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →5x127
6 vehicles · 6 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →6x135
4 vehicles · 5 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →5x100
4 vehicles · 3 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →5x150
3 vehicles · 5 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →5x108
2 vehicles · 3 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →5x120
2 vehicles · 4 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →6x120
2 vehicles · 3 wheels
View vehicles & wheels →Reference
How to read a bolt pattern
The format is always lug count × PCD. So “5x114.3” means five lugs arranged on a 114.3mm circle. The PCD is measured from the center of one lug hole to the center of the opposite one (for even-lug patterns) or calculated across the bolt circle (for five-lug patterns).
Two wheels can look identical and have the exact same lug count but use completely different PCDs — 5x114.3 and 5x120 are both five-lug but not interchangeable. That 0.7mm difference becomes several millimeters of error at each stud, meaning the wheel either won’t seat properly or will crack a stud under load.
The good news: every wheel we list is already matched to your vehicle’s bolt pattern. Browse by vehicle and you only see wheels that bolt straight on.