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How to choose the best bike tyre pressure — balancing speed, comfort and grip

You just pump them up as hard as you can right? It's not quite that simple

Getting the right tyre pressure is simple, right? Pump your tyres to the range recommended on the sidewall and away you go. Turns out it’s not quite that straightforward.

Your tyres do a lot of things. They grip the road so you can steer and go forward. On a road bike, they provide the only significant suspension, cushioning you from bumps and holes. They have to be tough enough not to puncture too easily, but thin and light enough to roll well. All these things are affected by pressure, as well as the design and construction of the tyre itself.

When you sit on a bike, your tyres compress. If they compress too much, they’ll writhe and squirm on the rims, making the bike harder to control, increasing rolling resistance and putting you at risk of pinch punctures. If they doesn’t compress enough, the ride will be harsh and there will be so little rubber on the road that grip will be reduced.

Somewhere in between those extremes, there must be an ideal compromise. How do you find it?

The happy medium

As well as pressure, how much your tyres compress depends on your weight, so if there’s an optimum pressure it will depend on your weight and the type of riding you do.

Engineer Frank Berto, who investigated this issue for Bicycling magazine back in the late 1980s, came up with a formula based on the weight on each tyre; he reckoned that the happy medium involved a tyre being compressed 15 percent of its height.

As a recreational and touring rider, Berto was probably more interested in comfort than speed, so this idea is controversial, because Berto recommends lower tyre pressures than most of us use.

Tyre drop is hard to measure, but Berto did a shedload of measurements, and plotted the pressure needed to give a tyre drop of 15 percent for a range of rider weights and tyre widths. Here’s a graph of his recommendations, showing the relationship between pressure and wheel load for each common road bike tyre size.

bertopresschart-roadcc.gif

Weighty matters

There are two important things to bear in mind here. The first is that the tyre width is measured not claimed. When Berto originally did his work on tyre drop there was a big problem with tyre manufacturers mislabelling their tyres because the easiest way to claim you had the lightest 23mm tyre was to mark a 21mm tyre as a 23mm. That’s improved, but some tyres are still wrongly marked; I recently put calipers on a nominal 28mm tyre that turned out to be just 26mm wide.

The other is that wheel load is per wheel. If you weigh 72kg and your bike weighs 8kg, then your tyres carry a total of 80kg but it’s not evenly distributed. The rear wheel carries more of the load, usually between 55 and 65 percent.

To determine the right pressure, you’ll need to measure the load on each wheel. Put a bathroom scale under one wheel and enough wooden blocks, books or old magazines under the other to level the bike. Lean very lightly against a wall to steady yourself and sit in your normal position on the bike. Get someone else to read the scale for you. Repeat the process with the scale under the other wheel.

If your rear wheel is carrying 44kg and your front 36kg (a 55:45 weight distribution) and you’re running 25mm tyres, then reading from the graph tells you that you want about 90psi in the rear tyre and 70psi in the front.

That’s probably lower than you’re currently running, so think of it as a starting point from which you can tweak the pressure until you get a feel you like.

If the pressure comes out well below the minimum recommended pressure of your tyre, then you can go skinnier; if it’s well above, then use a fatter tyre if your frame will accommodate one.

Controversy

As I mentioned, this approach is controversial. Another engineer, the late Jobst Brandt, author of ‘The Bicycle Wheel’ wrote in a newsgroup posting: “What Berto did not seem to consider is that hard cornering and rough pavement require higher inflation than comfort or other considerations might demand. Banking over to a maximum lateral acceleration of about 1g is not something that works reliably with a comfortably inflated tire, nor is encountering rough pavement with breaks and patches in the surface.”

Brandt was also sceptical about Berto’s notion that front and rear tyre pressures should reflect the loads on them. He wrote: “I run my tires at the upper end of pressure because snake bites are always a threat on mountain roads. When descending with hard braking, the front wheel carries the entire bicycle, with the back wheel at lift-off. The same is true climbing while seated on steep grades where front wheel rise is close at hand.”

More recently, Bicycle Quarterly magazine did some tests that revealed there was no speed advantage in pumping tyres up very hard. It was already known that when measured on a smooth drum rolling resistance didn’t decline much beyond a certain pressure. But as editor Jan Heine discusses here Bicycle Quarterly’s real-world testing indicates that when tyre pressures get too high, there’s no further reduction in rolling resistance. Heine believes that you lose the suspension effect of the tyres and that’s enough to push the rolling resistance back up.

What about tubeless?

With no tube to pinch, tubeless tyres give you the opportunity to run lower pressures with less risk. Jobst Brandt's concerns about high-speed cornering atill apply, though. 

In fact, tyre deformation in low-pressure tubeless set-ups is a major consideration because if you load a tubeless tyre sideways hard enough it can lift off the rim and burp out your air and sealant. On a mountain bike that usually just leads to an embarrassing minor spill, but on a high-speed road descent, it could easily be disastrous.

Even with tubeless tyres, then, you don't want to go to soft, and you don't want to go too hard either for the reasons discussed above.

We explored the subject of tubeless tyre pressures in a lot more detail in this article

Choices

Where does this leave you and me then? I think there are five take-homes:

If you ride in a leisurely manner — a short commute, gentle pootling around the lanes — then you can afford to run quite low pressures for comfort.

At the other extreme, don’t bother over-inflating your tyres for races and time trials. Unless the road surface is glass-smooth you won’t get any advantage, and let’s face it where are you going to find a road like that in the UK?

In between, you should tailor your tyre pressure to your riding style and roads. Ride in flat country and on smooth roads? Go for the lower end of the range between the Berto 15% drop figure and the range marked on your tyres.

In the hills I’d follow Jobst Brandt’s advice for equal pressures front and rear if you like to descend quickly. I love to go downhill fast (it makes up for the fact you need time-lapse photography to observe me climbing) but a front wheel impact puncture at 50mph is high on my list of things I’m not keen to try, along with BASE jumping and being visited in hospital by Boris Johnson.

If you're not a demon descender, you can run a softer front tyre for comfort.

if you're running tubeless tyres, you have more leeway to experiment with low pressures, but you should probably still treat the Berto recommendation as a lower bound, or at least experiment carefully with pressures lower than the Berto graph recommends.

For many of these situations, going up in tyre size is also a good idea. Our Mat Brett explored the reasons for fatter tyres in a Trendspotting piece. It’s a convincing case.

Gauges

To set your tyre pressure right you’ll need a pressure gauge. Track pumps usually have one built in, but they’re often not very accurate, especially if the pump is a bit old and has been kicked around the workshop floor.

A standalone gauge, properly looked after, is a better alternative. If you can find a sturdy, metal-bodied analogue gauge, grab it, but digital gauges like these are more convenient.

Topeak D2 Smart Head Digital Pressure Gauge — £29.99

Topeak digital gauge.jpeg

This well-regarded digital gauge measures in 1psi increments and automatically adapts to Schrader and presta valves. It reads up to 250psi so you can even use it on your mountain bike’s shocks too.

Find a Topeak dealer

SKS Airchecker — £21.99

SKS Airchecker - crop.jpg

Accurate enough for workshop duties, yet compact enought to slip into the smallest of seat packs or jersey pockets, the SKS Air Checker is a very tidy digital tyre pressure gauge.

Read our review of the SKS Airchecker

Find a SKS dealer

John has been writing about bikes and cycling for over 30 years since discovering that people were mug enough to pay him for it rather than expecting him to do an honest day's work.

He was heavily involved in the mountain bike boom of the late 1980s as a racer, team manager and race promoter, and that led to writing for Mountain Biking UK magazine shortly after its inception. He got the gig by phoning up the editor and telling him the magazine was rubbish and he could do better. Rather than telling him to get lost, MBUK editor Tym Manley called John’s bluff and the rest is history.

Since then he has worked on MTB Pro magazine and was editor of Maximum Mountain Bike and Australian Mountain Bike magazines, before switching to the web in 2000 to work for CyclingNews.com. Along with road.cc founder Tony Farrelly, John was on the launch team for BikeRadar.com and subsequently became editor in chief of Future Publishing’s group of cycling magazines and websites, including Cycling Plus, MBUK, What Mountain Bike and Procycling.

John has also written for Cyclist magazine, edited the BikeMagic website and was founding editor of TotalWomensCycling.com before handing over to someone far more representative of the site's main audience.

He joined road.cc in 2013. He lives in Cambridge where the lack of hills is more than made up for by the headwinds.

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73 comments

Avatar
ktache | 6 years ago
1 like

I believe Bike Snob NYC called fred on this regurgitated article .

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muffies | 6 years ago
0 likes

im usually lower than these charts on tubeless. 75kg/28mm usually 45psi rear 40 front works well. lower = too lower, higher = less cushiony/a lil slower. maybe i should pump em a lil higher. though the streets here are pretty bad.

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StraelGuy | 6 years ago
0 likes

Have to agree with you Check12. I'm 68kg and run 25s at 80psi front and 85psi rear.

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Nick T | 6 years ago
2 likes

Very simple formula, easy to remember. Start eith 120  and divide it by two, then add 60, et voila; you're ready to go

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sammutd88 | 6 years ago
1 like

I keep it simple. 80-85kg depending on how much ive indulged the past months. 

23c - Don't bother.

25c - 95psi rear/90psi front (tyres are generally 26-27mm mounted: Schwalbe One or Vittoria Corsa G+)

28c - 85psi rear/80psi front

I don't get pinch flats and comfort is great. Can probably drop by 5psi but no point if its working. All the charts I've looked at discriminate that I shouldn't ride a bike at my weight and if I do, my tyres should be at 125-130psi. They're wrong.

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MariaMartinez | 6 years ago
0 likes

This topic has been covered in depth on the Fastfitness.tips site, and there is a dynamic tire pressure calculator on there too. Whether it works or not, I don't know. 

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CXR94Di2 | 6 years ago
0 likes

I have 3 set of wheels for my bikes, 115kg rider+bike

25mm Tubeless for sportives, comfy and quick  95 psi

40mm tubeless  65 psi comfy for training

25mm tubular 125psi for fast riding

Avatar
surly_by_name | 6 years ago
1 like

"To determine the right pressure, you’ll need to measure the load on each wheel. Put a bathroom scale under one wheel and enough wooden blocks, books or old magazines under the other to level the bike. Lean very lightly against a wall to steady yourself and sit in your normal position on the bike. Get someone else to read the scale for you. Repeat the process with the scale under the other wheel."

Not wishing to throw stones from my glasshouse, but jesus, haven't you all got better things to do (like ride your bike)? On the road, with 25mm tyres, 105-110psi is always the right answer. Except if you are riding tubs, when 125-130psi is probably the right answer. Unless its wet. And your track pump's gauge has a 5-10% margin or error, so there's little point in preternding to be accurate.

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check12 replied to surly_by_name | 6 years ago
1 like

Just wrong dude!

i have a tyre pressure gauge also, so I am being accurate.

 

72kg bike and rider 80front 90 rear tyres 26mm measured, nice and comfy, nice and fast  

 

surly_by_name wrote:

"To determine the right pressure, you’ll need to measure the load on each wheel. Put a bathroom scale under one wheel and enough wooden blocks, books or old magazines under the other to level the bike. Lean very lightly against a wall to steady yourself and sit in your normal position on the bike. Get someone else to read the scale for you. Repeat the process with the scale under the other wheel."

Not wishing to throw stones from my glasshouse, but jesus, haven't you all got better things to do (like ride your bike)? On the road, with 25mm tyres, 105-110psi is always the right answer. Except if you are riding tubs, when 125-130psi is probably the right answer. Unless its wet. And your track pump's gauge has a 5-10% margin or error, so there's little point in preternding to be accurate.

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jackhannaford | 6 years ago
0 likes

Useful article but the comments exploded! 

 

I just ride my dayum bike  1

 

Also, any chart for a non-pro or non-racing cyclist topping out at less than 90 or 100kg excludes must exclude a large proportion of riders.

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brakesmadly replied to jackhannaford | 6 years ago
0 likes

jackhannaford wrote:

Also, any chart for a non-pro or non-racing cyclist topping out at less than 90 or 100kg excludes must exclude a large proportion of riders.

This chart covers riders up to about 140kg though.

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TypeVertigo | 7 years ago
1 like

At no time have I been subject to the vastly differing effects of tire pressure than with my current set of tires - 32 mm Clement Strada LGGs. Their pressure range is 40-80 psi.

In my experience, they really, really dislike high pressure. They roll very well at 70 psi, but just cannot corner with any real grip, and they are caught out by wet patches very easily. The phenomenon persists down to 65 psi too.

After lots of experimentation I got to my Goldilocks pressures: 45 psi front, 50 psi rear. This was a huge surprise, considering my bike and I weigh around 95 kg. So far, no pinch flats, no squirm, just as much grip as these tires are going to give me.

In contrast, my old set of 28 mm Continental UltraSport IIs were a lot more "straightforward." They were supposedly rated for a 80-105 psi range, so I kept them at 80. There are times when I'd ride tham at 70 or even 65 because of the normal leakage of air through a butyl inner tube, and I didn't come out any worse for wear.

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iandusud | 7 years ago
1 like

I think a lot also depends on how you ride. I used to do a lot of mountain biking on dry rocky surfaces in the south of France. I slowly dropped my pressures lower and lower, giving me greater comfort but also faster times as the bike rolled over the rough ground better. I learned to "ride light", that is to balance my weight evenly between my legs and arms over rough ground. 

Now that I ride almost exclusively on the road I have found that the same applies. I can run lower pressures than most and I have NEVER had a pinch flat. However I ride with others who run their tyres much harder than me who get pinch flats. 

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Jimthebikeguy.com | 7 years ago
4 likes

Seems best just to play about as it really depends on what bike and tire combo you have. My old CAAD8 was always up at about 100psi with 23mm tires and it rode like crap, because i believed everything i was told. Now i ride a Gt Grade with fat schwalbe s-ones at about 50 and its a revelation. Old tech vs new thinking. I arrived at 50psi via no science whatsoever, it just felt right.

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wycombewheeler | 7 years ago
0 likes

I ran mine at 90, never came close to either (80kg)

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Aileen | 7 years ago
0 likes

I weigh in at less than 50kg & ride around on 25 mil Vredestein Senso all weather tyres at 100 PSI. I'd be frightened they would pinch puncture or roll off at the 70 PSI recommended by Michelin.

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fukawitribe replied to Aileen | 7 years ago
1 like

Aileen wrote:

I weigh in at less than 50kg & ride around on 25 mil Vredestein Senso all weather tyres at 100 PSI. I'd be frightened they would pinch puncture or roll off at the 70 PSI recommended by Michelin.

I wouldn't be worried at all in general but it'll depend on the sort of surfaces you're riding on, tyre beads, rim profiles and so on. 100 psi on average British roads with 25mm tyres sounds very high, especially at such a small mass, but low if you were on the track permanently. If you're not riding on very, very smooth surfaces all the time how about a compromise and try 75/80psi front/rear and see how it goes and adjust from there ? I'd hazard a guess that with any half decent tyre and rim combination there'd be no reason to worry about any roll-off (less chance of blow-off too) and a lot to potentially gain for grip, comfort and general rolling efficiency. Worth a punt mate.

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StraelGuy | 7 years ago
2 likes

Alot of these charts and opinions about sky high pressures is to do with with the traditional mindset that the only good road bike tyre is a rock hard road bike tyre going back to the days of 21 and 23mm tyres.

 

When I hired a bike in Lanzarote recently I took my 25mm Conti Grandprix GT tyres and when the bloke (no spring chicken but amazing at fitting tight tyres with no tools!) went to fit them, he went "Right, what's the max pressure on the side, 120 psi? Right, let's put 120 psi in them". I asked him to put 80 psi in them (I'm 67kg), he wouldn't have a word of it and eventually put 100 psi in as a grudging compromise. Naturally I just let a bit of air out after he'd gone.

 

Witht the popularity of 25+ mm tyres and the increasing evidence about rolling resistance and comfort, the mindset among cyclists will gradually start to change.

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peted76 replied to StraelGuy | 6 years ago
0 likes

guyrwood wrote:

Alot of these charts and opinions about sky high pressures is to do with with the traditional mindset that the only good road bike tyre is a rock hard road bike tyre going back to the days of 21 and 23mm tyres.

 

When I hired a bike in Lanzarote recently I took my 25mm Conti Grandprix GT tyres and when the bloke (no spring chicken but amazing at fitting tight tyres with no tools!) went to fit them, he went "Right, what's the max pressure on the side, 120 psi? Right, let's put 120 psi in them". I asked him to put 80 psi in them (I'm 67kg), he wouldn't have a word of it and eventually put 100 psi in as a grudging compromise. Naturally I just let a bit of air out after he'd gone.

 

Witht the popularity of 25+ mm tyres and the increasing evidence about rolling resistance and comfort, the mindset among cyclists will gradually start to change.

In Lanzarote that is normal, the roads are really very good and there's no real need to go lower. 

 

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hampstead_bandit | 8 years ago
0 likes

I've found a big difference in finding a suitable working tire pressure between vulcanised tires (i.e. Conti GP 4000 II in 25c) and high TPI open tubular tires (i.e. Vittoria Corsa G+ in 25c) , and even a slight difference when using a butyl tube and latex tube in the open tubular

anyone else experienced this?

 

 

Avatar
Simmo72 | 8 years ago
3 likes

I'm 6ft 4, 95kg, and have never ridden with the pressure this suggests.  For starters I think I would crap myself straining on the track pump.  100-105 psi on 25's and I'm happy, any more and its a boneshaking ride.  Plenty of grip, smooth, few punctures and decent tyre wear.  Each to to their own I guess.  Probably like the lemond formular, ok as a starting point, then find your own way in life.

 

 

Avatar
whobiggs replied to Simmo72 | 8 years ago
3 likes

Simmo72 wrote:

I'm 6ft 4, 95kg, and have never ridden with the pressure this suggests.  For starters I think I would crap myself straining on the track pump.  100-105 psi on 25's and I'm happy, any more and its a boneshaking ride.  Plenty of grip, smooth, few punctures and decent tyre wear.  Each to to their own I guess.  Probably like the lemond formular, ok as a starting point, then find your own way in life.

 

 

I agree, the Michelin chart has the top cut off, I'd (do) need to lose 12kg to get on the chart!

Avatar
armb replied to whobiggs | 7 years ago
1 like

whobiggs wrote:

Simmo72 wrote:

I'm 6ft 4, 95kg, and have never ridden with the pressure this suggests.  For starters I think I would crap myself straining on the track pump.  100-105 psi on 25's and I'm happy, any more and its a boneshaking ride.  Plenty of grip, smooth, few punctures and decent tyre wear.  Each to to their own I guess.  Probably like the lemond formular, ok as a starting point, then find your own way in life.

I agree, the Michelin chart has the top cut off, I'd (do) need to lose 12kg to get on the chart!

Same here, roughly. But the vertical bit suggests that anything higher than the weight on the top of the chart, just use the same pressure.

However, I think it's safe to say I'm not going to try 23mm tyres on my tandem  1

 

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cyclisto | 8 years ago
1 like

I weigh 75kg and I have a 13kg bike, and I inflate my 700x32c tyres at 80psi and sometimes I can find tire pressure that has droped down to 50 psi. At 80 psi the ride is very harsh, but on the other hand I have forgoten how to change an inner tube

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fukawitribe | 8 years ago
1 like

Tyre widths for pressure calculations are normally quoted as measured,rather than nominal, width IME, so should be good as a first approximation. Agree the figures are high though.

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Eddie A. | 8 years ago
6 likes

What's missing in the article is the influence rim width has on the optimum tire pressure. You can install the same 25 mm clincher on an old school 13c rim with 13 mm of width between the hooks and end up with a much higher required pressure than when you install it on a modern rim with 17 to 19 mm inner width. The tire will measure 1 to 1.5 mm wider on the wider rim but the main effect is indeed the much bigger area where the wider rim supports the tire through the trapped air. Expect to be able to lower the tire pressure by 20% when going from a 13 mm rim to another one with 17 mm inner rim width with the same tire.

I assume when Berto tested road tires he was using rims with 13 to 14 mm inner rim width since that was kind of a norm at that time. So nowadays with modern wheels Berto's values are already the upper limits of what is sensible even for race usage.

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BBB | 8 years ago
11 likes

The advice about pressure could be contained in one sentence.

Go as low as you can as long as you don't suffer rim strikes/pinch flats and handling issuses.

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KiwiMike replied to BBB | 8 years ago
10 likes

BBB wrote:

The advice about pressure could be contained in one sentence. Go as low as you can as long as you don't suffer rim strikes/pinch flats and handling issuses.

 

Sorry BBB, most people don't have an endless supply of wheels/tyres/tubes to experiment with. You only know when you've gone beyond what is sensible when you puncture / collapse your rim / loose traction and fly off the road / have your tyre roll off.

So suggesting people just keep going lower and lower until 'something bad happens' is not good advice.

Whereas measuring your tyre, weighing yourself, then adjusting *slightly* either way is scientific, proven, and is far less likely to see you repairing flats / buying new rims / fishing yourself from a hedge.

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Simon E replied to KiwiMike | 8 years ago
5 likes

KiwiMike wrote:

measuring your tyre, weighing yourself, then adjusting *slightly* either way is scientific, proven, and is far less likely to see you repairing flats / buying new rims / fishing yourself from a hedge.

This is like people who roast, hand-grind and precisely weigh and their coffee stating that anything else isn't really coffee.

What I think this boils down to is not right or wrong but that you prefer a convoluted, technical looking method because you think it's terribly important. BBB and I disagree, there's no need to make it complicated.

I've run pressures from 40 to 100 psi in my road tyres and only ever had one pinch flat after riding too fast through a puddle on a disused railway trackbed. It taught me that I should ride more slowly in those conditions.

Avatar
fukawitribe replied to Simon E | 8 years ago
3 likes

Simon E wrote:

KiwiMike wrote:

measuring your tyre, weighing yourself, then adjusting *slightly* either way is scientific, proven, and is far less likely to see you repairing flats / buying new rims / fishing yourself from a hedge.

This is like people who roast, hand-grind and precisely weigh and their coffee stating that anything else isn't really coffee.

No, it really isn't. The 'measuring' is trivial and everyday - bathroom scales and side of the tyre (as a first guess of actual inflated size). The comment Mike was replying to mentioned reducing pressure until you got handling issues (amongst other signs) - i'd agree with him that perhaps that's not the safest way of doing things .

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