Calchy.
9 model years

Mazda MX-5 Miata tire pressure

Select your model year for the exact OEM cold PSI specification and tire size.

In every unit
PSI
29/29
bar
2.00/2.00
kPa
200/200
kg/cm²
2.04/2.04

Front / rear, cold. Same number expressed in the unit your gauge uses.

The Mazda MX-5 Miata (2016–2024) is a sports weighing approximately 1,065 kg with a 52% front weight bias. OEM cold tire pressure has remained constant at 29/29 PSI across all 9 model years. Front and rear pressures are equal, balancing tire wear across both axles. OEM tire size is 195/50R16. Pick a year below for the verified spec and a calculator to adjust for load, sport, or track-day use.

By year

Pick your model year

Use cases

Setups for the Mazda MX-5 Miata

Community-tuned pressure adjustments — track, winter, load, wheel upgrades.
Adjustments

Weather, altitude, and load

Cold weather (below 0 °C)
Tires lose roughly 1 PSI for every 10 °C drop. Going from a +20 °C summer day to a −10 °C winter morning, your 29 PSI tires read closer to 26 PSI — under-inflated. Compensate by inflating to 31/31 PSI when temperatures sit consistently below freezing.
Hot weather + long highway driving
Tires gain 4–6 PSI when hot from highway speeds in summer. Set cold pressure to the OEM number (29/29 PSI) — don't try to compensate by under-inflating cold. Always set pressure first thing in the morning, before the first drive.
High altitude (above 1500 m)
Lower atmospheric pressure means a sealed tire reads ~1 PSI higher per 1000 m of elevation gain. Driving from sea level to a 2000 m ski resort, expect your gauge to read ~31 PSI for what was 29 PSI at sea level. This is benign — don't bleed it down.
Fully loaded (passengers + cargo)
For a full house — passengers, luggage, towing — increase rear pressure by 2–4 PSI: 29/32 PSI is a safe target. The fronts stay the same since the steering axle load doesn't change much.
Performance + tuning

Tuning the NC for track or street

For NC-generation MX-5 owners going beyond the door-jamb spec — Stage 1 remap, turbo kit, 2.5L Duratec swap, MazdaEdit / MS3 standalone — see the in-depth MX-5 NC tuning articles at dms-tuned.eu. Real dyno data, customer cases, and part numbers from the shop.

Common mistakes

Don't get this wrong

Reading the sidewall instead of the door jamb
The number stamped on the tire's sidewall is the maximum the tire can safely hold — usually 44–51 PSI. It's not what your Mazda MX-5 Miata is tuned for. Use 29/29 PSI from the door-jamb spec.
Checking pressure when tires are warm
Tires gain 3–5 PSI after 5+ minutes of driving. If you check after a drive and see 33 PSI, you're actually running ~28 PSI cold — and you'll bleed it down to 29 PSI. Always measure after 3+ hours parked.
Using the spec from a different model year
Generation changes can shift the OEM number — different curb weight, different tire size, different load index. Pick your exact year above instead of trusting a forum post from a different generation.
Ignoring the rear when running loaded
Going on a long road trip with luggage + 4 passengers? Most manufacturers print a separate "max load" pressure on the door jamb (typically +3 PSI rear). For the Mazda MX-5 Miata, target around 29/32 PSI when fully loaded.
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