Glossary

Trailer tire

Last reviewed: 2026-05-20

A tire mounted on a trailer axle — the rear axle or axles on the pulled unit rather than on the tractor. Trailer tires are almost always run in dual assemblies on standard van, reefer, and flatbed configurations, though wide-base singles are used on some fuel-optimized trailers. They handle lower steer forces than tractor front tires but face scrubbing from tight turns, off-center cargo loading, and irregular maintenance intervals — trailer custody changes frequently in pool fleets, so consistent inspection history is rarely guaranteed.

Trailer tires often see scrub, mixed service, and less consistent inspection than tractor tires. In a pool trailer environment, the trailer may pass between multiple carriers, drivers, and yards — with each handoff creating a gap in pressure history. Inside duals on trailer axles are especially likely to go unchecked between service stops because they are harder to access and may not show visible distress from the outside until significant pressure loss has occurred.

Real-World Use

A dropped trailer sits at a shipper dock for four days. When the driver picks it up Monday morning, the trailer tires may have lost pressure from slow valve or bead leaks developing unnoticed. A fresh cold-pressure check on all eight trailer tires — including inside duals — before departure is the only reliable way to start from a known baseline. In this scenario, two inside dual tires are found 12 PSI below the correct target, a situation that would have been invisible from a walk-around.

What to Pair It With

Read this term with the full tire sidewall, vehicle rating information, manufacturer documentation, and the actual condition of the tire.

This site is for general information only. It does not replace professional tire service, DOT compliance advice, tire manufacturer instructions, vehicle manufacturer recommendations, or fleet policy.