bigger sidewalls for 20" ok?
any owners here have increased their 20s to these from the standard 40/35?
if so, does this shoot off any sensors and/or dramatically misread the car speed?
i'd love to get a bit taller sidewalls for greater "cushion" on my oem 20s.




any owners here have increased their 20s to these from the standard 40/35?
if so, does this shoot off any sensors and/or dramatically misread the car speed?
i'd love to get a bit taller sidewalls for greater "cushion" on my oem 20s.
The ABC/ESP and 4Matic sensors are not triggered by the overall diameter, but rather by the difference between front vs rear wheels. You just need to make sure you have a difference of no more than 5% for the rotational speed between front and rear, and if so, so u should be fine as far as sensor. There are some calculators online to double check the rear vs front difference in diameter (again, should be less than 5% difference between front and rear no matter what size you choose). You are probably fine since you are increasing both rear and front by the same value anyway, so your original front to rear difference should be maintained.
By the way, the S63 E Performance (AMG) actually uses 255/45R20 and 285/40R20 as a factory size, so you might be able to keep your current 20" as planned and just go with 40/45 with that wheel. Again, the factor that matters the most for 4Matic and sensors is the difference in speed or rolling circumference between rear and front, not just the overall diameter. Check some calculators online to confirm the rolling circumference between your current size and the other one you wanna go with. Remember that the rolling circumference is a function of width, radius and the tire profile not just the profile. I did something very similar in my 7 series by going with slightly wider tires than factory, and the ride comfort is better now although the reason I did is to get All-Season NRF and the ride quality was just a 2nd factor I didn't care about.
One thing to keep in mind for your case, when you increase the profile, even though the sensors and 4Matic system is fine, your measured speed may change if you increase the total diameter of the tire and keep the 20s. Larger overall diameter means faster actual speed when your speedometer is reading lower values. This is a good calculator for that: https://tiresize.com/speedometer-calibration/




Use this calculator below, and use the 2nd table on the home page, add both sizes that you want to compare, and then then look for (Tire Circumference) difference under the results. Tire 1 should be your front and Tire 2 should be the rear. Do it once for the standard size and you will find that the Tire Circumference is below 5% as it should. Then do it again wherein Tire 1 and Tire 2 are your NEW tire dimensions and make sure that the Tire Circumference difference between your NEW front and rear remain also below 5%. You can also use this calculator to compare new vs old dimensions but in that case Tire 1 and 2 will be your old front vs new front as an example.
https://www.calculator.net/tire-size-calculator.html
If you can't figure it out or use the calculators, just post your full tire sizes (current) as well as the new one with all dimensions, and I can run the calculator for you when I sign in again in the evening.
Last edited by S_W222; Dec 29, 2025 at 12:37 PM.
then going 35-->45 in rear wouldn't work by that math... the difference is greater than 8%.
sucks cuz ps4 AS in 285 does not come in 40 profile.
if i go 295 i can get to 40... would that bulge out too much on oem 20s? anyone have this 295/40 in the stock rear?
Trending Topics




then going 35-->45 in rear wouldn't work by that math... the difference is greater than 8%.
sucks cuz ps4 AS in 285 does not come in 40 profile.
if i go 295 i can get to 40... would that bulge out too much on oem 20s? anyone have this 295/40 in the stock rear?
my OEM i7 21" stagger were: Front 255/40R21 and Rear: 285/35R21
I replaced them with NRF all season, slightly wider to Front: 265/40R21 and Rear: 295/35R21
The net change I did by doing that is that my overall diameter is 1% larger now (I got 10mm in width as well as 4mm extra cushion). The net increase in diameter in the front was 1% and the same exact is 1% in the rear, which means my new rolling differential compared to OEM is net 0% (aka, my new front-to-rear rolling diameter relationship essentially the same) but now I have wider and slightly larger profile for much better comfort, and much better tires, cheaper tires and more accessible size too! Another benefit is that the stance of my car looks better now with 295 in the rear. On turns, although I don't feel much difference as I have active/mechanical anti-roll bars, the car should be more sharp/flat on turns at least by math.
So for you, you can do the same by going with 255/40R20 --> 265/40R20 on the front, and 285/35R20 --> 295/35R20 for the rear. This approach is less risky, but will get you the benefits you are looking for. I think the visuals will look better too. Increasing the profile randomly will make the tire ugly. But wider tire with (less) proportional positive increase in profile will not change the aesthetics. Yet you would get the outcomes you are looking for. More comfort combined with better look honestly. Your MPG mathematically would be 1-2% lower but who cares when it's more comfy then and better looking. You speed difference also would be just 1% as opposed to 3-4% for your originakl plan, and your rolling diameter difference front to rear would be similar (just <1% difference from OEM) and within the allowable 5%
Last edited by S_W222; Dec 29, 2025 at 01:55 PM.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
MB made terrible choice with the stock profile size - ur i7 on stock 21s are 40/35 whilst the MB is 35/30. no wonder the 21s on the w223 are getting so many complaints.
will look into changing my 20s from 255/40 285/35 to 265/40 295/35... thanks for suggestion!
I expected a slightly lower reading vs. actual speed(GPS) but to my surprise, the speedometer showed 1-2mph above the gps speed- same as the OEM wheels/tires I had.
I guess the speed sensors are not simply reading the rotational speed of the wheels.
Last edited by nearwater4me; Dec 31, 2025 at 04:32 AM.




MB made terrible choice with the stock profile size - ur i7 on stock 21s are 40/35 whilst the MB is 35/30. no wonder the 21s on the w223 are getting so many complaints.
will look into changing my 20s from 255/40 285/35 to 265/40 295/35... thanks for suggestion!
I did adjust my ghost links about 10cm higher (when the car is in sport + mode) due to the lowering of my S580 at high speeds no speedometer problem at all
Last edited by DonS550; Jan 1, 2026 at 05:54 AM.
what tire brand/model r u running?
I'll probably stick with 20" due to the common blowouts reported on 21s (hell, even on my 20s with stick hankook i had a blowout!).
although i wonder if ur double increase on tire size entirely removes this issue on the 21s..??
also would u mind posting 3 shots of urs on the ghost links... raised, comfort and sport.
Last edited by tonupbklyn; Jan 1, 2026 at 02:18 PM.
any owners having have had good experiences with increasing size on their 20s with AS tires, world love to hear what brand/model.
any owners having have had good experiences with increasing size on their 20s with AS tires, world love to hear what brand/model.
I think the S63 OEM tires (PS4S) provides better sidewall protection compared to the other same profile options.
MB must have spec'd it better than the standard S580 considering the 5700+ lbs. weight of the S63E




what tire brand/model r u running?
I'll probably stick with 20" due to the common blowouts reported on 21s (hell, even on my 20s with stick hankook i had a blowout!).
although i wonder if ur double increase on tire size entirely removes this issue on the 21s..??
also would u mind posting 3 shots of urs on the ghost links... raised, comfort and sport.



