Speedometer Error: 255/45R19 → 245/45R20
Moving from 255/45R19 (28.04″) to 245/45R20 (28.68″) changes overall diameter by +2.30%. Your speedometer was calibrated for the stock size, so it now reads 2.30% low versus actual speed.
What this means for your vehicle
Changing from 255/45R19 to 245/45R20 shifts overall tire diameter by +2.30%, which produces a proportional 2.30% error in the speedometer and odometer readings. Because 245/45R20 is taller than 255/45R19, each tire revolution covers more ground, so the factory speedometer reads low — you are actually moving faster than the dash shows. At an indicated 30 mph (city driving) your actual speed is 30.7 mph; at 60 mph (highway) it is 61.4 mph; at 75 mph (cruise control) it becomes 76.7 mph. The odometer drifts at the same rate — over 12,000 indicated miles per year, you actually travel 276 miles more than the dash shows, which matters for lease-mileage caps and warranty tracking. Most ECUs are designed to tolerate up to ±3% of calibration drift, so no recalibration is required for legal or safety compliance. If you plan to keep the 245/45R20 setup long-term, an OBD-II programmer or dealer recalibration costs roughly $50–150 and restores accurate readings across the instrument cluster.
Odometer impact
For every indicated mile, you're actually traveling 1.0230 miles. Over 10,000 indicated miles, that's 10230 actual miles. Check your warranty and service intervals accordingly.
Interactive calculator
275/65R18 or "33" for inch aliases255/45R19
- Diameter
- 28.04″ / 712.1mm
- Section Width
- 10.04″
- Sidewall
- 4.52″ / 114.75mm
- Circumference
- 88.08″
- Revs/Mile
- 719
245/45R20
- Diameter
- 28.68″ / 728.5mm
- Section Width
- 9.65″
- Sidewall
- 4.34″ / 110.25mm
- Circumference
- 90.1″
- Revs/Mile
- 703
Speedometer & Diameter Impact
Different rim — new wheels requiredAt an indicated 60 mph, your actual speed is 61.38 mph (98.78 km/h). Your speedometer reads 2.30% low versus actual speed.