Jalopnik Explains 4 PSI Tire Rule, Warning It Breaks Down Below 12 PSI
Updated
Updated · Jalopnik · Jun 22
Jalopnik Explains 4 PSI Tire Rule, Warning It Breaks Down Below 12 PSI
1 articles · Updated · Jalopnik · Jun 22
Summary
A roughly 4 PSI rise after 30 minutes of highway driving usually signals a tire started near the manufacturer’s recommended cold pressure, while a bigger jump can indicate underinflation and a smaller one overinflation.
The rule works because tire flex creates heat through hysteresis, warming the air inside; drivers should use the door-jamb cold-pressure sticker as the baseline, not the sidewall maximum rating.
AAA’s 2023 test of 11 vehicles found most built-in TPMS readings were within about 1 PSI of actual pressure, making them generally reliable for checking the change after a drive.
The guideline loses value when pressures are intentionally far below road specs—around 12 PSI for sand, 18 for mud, 20 for snow, 25 for gravel—or with drag slicks running 4 to 12 PSI.
Tire design also limits the rule’s reach: mud and all-terrain tires shed heat differently because their tread has more open space, so pressure changes may not mirror standard street tires.