Bolt Pattern Cross-Reference
Select a bolt pattern or your exact vehicle to instantly see every match in our fitment database, plus a clear warning on which similar-looking patterns are not interchangeable.
Select a bolt pattern
Bolt pattern
5x114.3
31 vehicles · 8 wheels in stock spec
5 lug holes on a 114.3mm pitch circle diameter (PCD). Any wheel drilled to this exact spec will bolt straight on.
Similar patterns are not interchangeable
5x114.3 only matches wheels drilled to exactly 5x114.3. A wheel with the same lug count but a different pitch circle diameter (PCD), for example 5x114.3 versus 5x120, will not bolt on, even though both are 5-lug patterns. The lug holes must line up exactly. There is no safe rounding.
Patterns commonly confused with 5x114.3: 5x120. Double-check your exact PCD before ordering, not just the lug count.
Vehicles that share this pattern
| Vehicle | Years | |
|---|---|---|
| Tesla Model Y | 2020–2026 | See wheels → |
| Tesla Model 3 | 2017–2026 | See wheels → |
| Ford Mustang | 2015–2026 | See wheels → |
| Toyota RAV4 | 2019–2026 | See wheels → |
| Ford Mustang Mach-E | 2021–2026 | See wheels → |
| Tesla Model S | 2014–2026 | See wheels → |
| Subaru WRX | 2022–2026 | See wheels → |
| Toyota Camry | 2018–2026 | See wheels → |
| Honda Civic | 2022–2026 | See wheels → |
| Tesla Model X | 2016–2026 | See wheels → |
| Nissan Z | 2023–2026 | See wheels → |
| Kia Telluride | 2020–2026 | See wheels → |
| Lexus IS | 2021–2026 | See wheels → |
| Honda Accord | 2018–2026 | See wheels → |
| Toyota Highlander | 2020–2026 | See wheels → |
| Nissan 370Z | 2009–2020 | See wheels → |
| Lexus RX | 2020–2026 | See wheels → |
| Mazda CX-5 | 2017–2026 | See wheels → |
| Toyota Corolla | 2019–2026 | See wheels → |
| Honda Pilot | 2016–2026 | See wheels → |
| Honda CR-V | 2017–2026 | See wheels → |
| Nissan Rogue | 2021–2026 | See wheels → |
| Hyundai Santa Fe | 2019–2026 | See wheels → |
| Kia Sportage | 2022–2026 | See wheels → |
| Hyundai Elantra | 2021–2026 | See wheels → |
| Mazda Mazda3 | 2019–2026 | See wheels → |
| Kia K5 | 2021–2026 | See wheels → |
| Hyundai Sonata | 2020–2026 | See wheels → |
| Nissan Altima | 2019–2026 | See wheels → |
| Hyundai Tucson | 2022–2026 | See wheels → |
| Toyota Prius | 2016–2026 | See wheels → |
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Next step
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Bolt pattern is one part of fitment. Your vehicle hub shows wheels already confirmed to fit your exact bolt pattern, hub bore, and offset range.
Guide
How to use this tool
1. Choose a lookup method
Already know your bolt pattern? Select it directly from the dropdown. Not sure? Switch to “Look up by vehicle” and pick your make and model instead.
2. Review the match list
The tool shows every vehicle in our database confirmed on that exact pattern, with years and hub bore, so you can sanity-check against your own vehicle before assuming a wheel will fit.
3. Read the compatibility warning
Every result flags similar patterns that are commonly confused with your match, so you do not accidentally shop a wheel drilled to the wrong PCD.
Reference
Bolt pattern reference by vehicle
Browse every bolt pattern in our database with full vehicle and wheel listings.
Guide
Bolt patterns explained
What each number means, why lug count alone is not enough, and how PCD is measured.
Guide
How to measure your bolt pattern
Step-by-step measuring instructions for both even and odd lug counts, with no special tools required.
Next step
Now find wheels that fit your car
Vehicle hub
Tesla Model Y
See wheels confirmed to fit, filtered and ready to browse.
Vehicle hub
Ford F-150
See wheels confirmed to fit, filtered and ready to browse.
Vehicle hub
Toyota Tacoma
See wheels confirmed to fit, filtered and ready to browse.
Vehicle hub
Toyota 4Runner
See wheels confirmed to fit, filtered and ready to browse.
Vehicle hub
Jeep Wrangler
See wheels confirmed to fit, filtered and ready to browse.
Vehicle hub
Chevrolet Silverado 1500
See wheels confirmed to fit, filtered and ready to browse.
FAQ
Common questions
- What is a bolt pattern?
- A bolt pattern (also called PCD, or pitch circle diameter) describes how a wheel bolts to a vehicle's hub. It is written as two numbers, like 5x114.3: the first number is how many lug holes the wheel has, and the second is the diameter in millimeters of the circle that passes through the center of each lug hole. Both numbers must match exactly between the wheel and the hub for the wheel to bolt on correctly.
- Are similar-looking bolt patterns interchangeable?
- No. Two patterns with the same lug count are not automatically compatible. For example, 5x114.3 and 5x120 are both 5-lug patterns, but the pitch circle diameter is different (114.3mm versus 120mm), so a wheel built for one will not bolt onto a hub built for the other. Even a difference of a few millimeters in PCD means the lug holes will not line up. Always match the full pattern, lug count and PCD together, not just the lug count.
- How do I find my bolt pattern?
- The most reliable way is to check your vehicle's manual, the door jamb sticker, or the OEM wheel itself, which is sometimes stamped with the spec. You can also measure it directly: for an even lug count, measure center-to-center between two lug holes directly across from each other. For an odd lug count (like 5-lug), measure from the center of one hole to the outer edge of the hole two positions away, then use a bolt pattern conversion chart. Or use the vehicle lookup in the tool above to find your exact make and model.
- What is PCD?
- PCD stands for pitch circle diameter: the diameter, in millimeters, of the imaginary circle that runs through the center of every lug hole on a wheel. It is the second number in a bolt pattern, so in 5x114.3, the PCD is 114.3mm. PCD must match exactly between wheel and hub. There is no acceptable tolerance for rounding, since even a small PCD mismatch prevents the lug holes from aligning with the wheel studs.
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Every wheel on AlloyHaus is checked against your bolt pattern, hub bore, and offset range. No guesswork required.