Alloy wheel hub assembly showing a five lug nut bolt circle measurement process

Toyota Wheel Bolt Pattern Guide: Find the Right Fit for Your Vehicle

You’ve found the perfect set of new wheels for your Toyota, but now you’re staring at a bunch of numbers and wondering—will they actually bolt on?

Getting the bolt pattern right is step one for any wheel upgrade or replacement. The good news is that Toyota uses just a few main patterns across its lineup, and once you know yours, finding compatible wheels gets a whole lot easier.


TL;DR

Toyota uses three main bolt patterns. 5×114.3 (also called 5×4.5″) covers most sedans, crossovers, and newer compacts like the Camry, RAV4, Highlander, and 2020+ Corolla . 6×139.7 (6×5.5″) is the truck and SUV pattern found on Tacoma, 4Runner, and new-gen Tundra and Sequoia . 5×100 was used on older Corolla, Prius, and Matrix models . The 2007-2021 Tundra is an outlier with 5×150 .


Key Takeaways

  • 5×114.3 is the most common — it fits Camry, RAV4, Highlander, Corolla (2020+), and many more
  • 6×139.7 is the truck pattern — used on Tacoma, 4Runner, FJ Cruiser, and new Tundra/Sequoia
  • 5×100 is older compact spec — pre-2020 Corolla, Prius, Matrix use this pattern
  • Center bore matters too — even with the right bolt pattern, the wheel’s center hole must match your hub
  • Lug nut torque specs vary — Camry is 103 N·m, GR Corolla is 89 ft-lbs, Land Cruiser Prado is 131 N·m

Toyota Bolt Pattern Reference Table

Bolt PatternModelsNotes
5×114.3 (5×4.5″)Camry (all years), RAV4 (all years), Highlander, Avalon, Venza, Corolla (2020+), CH-R, GR Corolla, SiennaMost common pattern — also shared with Honda and many other brands
6×139.7 (6×5.5″)Tacoma (all years, 4WD), 4Runner (2010+), FJ Cruiser, Tundra (2022+), Sequoia (2023+), Land Cruiser (select years)Truck and SUV pattern — also found on GM and other trucks
5×100Corolla (pre-2020), Prius (2016-2022), Matrix, Scion modelsOlder compact car pattern
5×150Tundra (2007-2021), Land Cruiser (100/200 series), Sequoia (pre-2023), Lexus LXOutlier pattern — does not fit the 6-lug truck group

Detailed Model Breakdown

Sedans and Compacts

  • Camry (all years): 5×114.3, center bore 60.1mm. Wheel sizes range from 16″ to 19″ depending on trim .
  • Corolla (2014-2019): 5×100, center bore 54.1mm. This is the older pattern — don’t mix with Camry wheels .
  • Corolla (2020+): 5×114.3, center bore 60.1mm. Moved to the TNGA platform with matching specs to Camry/RAV4 .
  • GR Corolla (2023+): 5×114.3, center bore 60.1mm, M12x1.5 thread pitch, 60º conical lug seat .
  • Prius (2016-2022): 5×100, center bore 54.1mm .

SUVs and Crossovers

  • RAV4 (all years): 5×114.3, center bore 60.1mm. Hybrid models may have slightly different wheel specs — always specify when ordering .
  • Highlander (2014+): 5×114.3, center bore 60.1mm .
  • CH-R (2018-2022): 5×114.3 .

Trucks and Body-on-Frame SUVs

  • Tacoma (all 4WD models): 6×139.7. Note: some 2WD base trims use a 5-lug pattern that’s not compatible .
  • 4Runner (2010+): 6×139.7. Shares the pattern with Tacoma and FJ Cruiser .
  • Tundra (2007-2021): 5×150 — this is the odd one out! Do not try to use 6×139.7 wheels on these models .
  • Tundra (2022+): 6×139.7 — finally switched to match Tacoma and 4Runner .

Cross-Compatibility Quick Reference

Here’s the cheat sheet for which Toyota models can share wheels :

5×114.3 / 60.1mm group (interchangeable with caution on offset/size):

  • Camry (all years)
  • RAV4 (all years)
  • Corolla (2020+)
  • Highlander
  • Avalon
  • Venza

6×139.7 / 106.1mm group:

  • Tacoma (all years)
  • 4Runner (2010+)
  • FJ Cruiser
  • Tundra (2022+)
  • Sequoia (2023+)

5×100 / 54.1mm group:

  • Corolla (pre-2020)
  • Prius
  • Matrix
  • Scion models

Important note: Bolt pattern matching is just the start. You also need to check center bore, offset, and wheel diameter for proper fitment .


Beyond the Bolt Pattern: Key Fitment Details

Center Bore

This is the hole in the center of the wheel that fits over the hub. If the center bore is too small, the wheel won’t physically mount. If it’s too large, the wheel won’t be hub-centric and may vibrate — you’d need hub-centric rings to fill the gap .

Lug Nut Specs and Torque

Getting the right lug nuts and torque is critical for safety :

  • 2020+ Camry: M12x1.5 thread, tighten to 103 N·m (76 ft-lb) in a star pattern .
  • GR Corolla: M12x1.5 thread, OEM spec 89 ft-lb. Aftermarket lugs may have their own spec .
  • Land Cruiser Prado (J150): Tighten to approx. 131 N·m .

Always re-torque lug nuts after 50-100 miles of driving when new wheels are installed .


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most common Toyota bolt pattern?

5×114.3 (also written as 5×4.5″) is the most common, found on Camry, RAV4, Highlander, and many other models .

Is 6×139.7 the same as 6×5.5?

Yes — they’re the exact same bolt pattern. The metric (139.7mm) and imperial (5.5 inches) measurements are equivalent .

Will Tacoma wheels fit a 4Runner?

Usually yes, but check the year. They share the 6×139.7 bolt pattern. However, new 2024+ Tacoma wheels have a 95.1mm hub bore versus the older 106.1mm, so you’ll need hub-centric rings . Also, 2WD Tacomas with 5-lug patterns won’t fit .

Will Camry wheels fit a RAV4?

Physically yes — they share 5×114.3 and 60.1mm center bore. But check the offset and wheel diameter. Using a much smaller wheel than originally equipped can affect speedometer accuracy and handling .

Why won’t my 2007-2021 Tundra wheels fit a Tacoma?

The older Tundra uses a 5×150 bolt pattern, while Tacoma uses 6×139.7. They’re completely different — don’t even try .


References

For further reading:


Have you found unexpected wheel compatibility across Toyota models? Or run into fitment issues? Share your experience in the comments to help others avoid the same mistakes!

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