Low tire pressure starts around 20–25% below your door-jamb PSI, and it can raise heat, wear, and stopping distance.
PSI is just a number until your car starts feeling odd: slower steering, extra road noise, longer stops, or a TPMS light that won’t quit. “Low” also isn’t one universal PSI. It depends on the pressure your vehicle was built around, not what a buddy runs and not the max number stamped on the tire.
Use this page to pin down what “low” means for your car, spot the early tells, and decide what to do next so a small leak doesn’t turn into a ruined tire.
What counts as low PSI for car tires on the road
Start with your vehicle’s recommended cold inflation pressure. It’s printed on the driver-side door jamb placard (sometimes on the door edge or B-pillar). That placard is the baseline for normal driving with the factory tire size.
Once you know the placard PSI, low pressure is best judged as a percentage drop:
- Mildly low: about 10% under placard.
- Low: about 15–20% under placard.
- Seriously low: about 25% under placard or more.
That 25% range lines up with how many TPMS systems are designed to warn. U.S. federal rules for TPMS tie the warning requirement to a drop to 25% below the vehicle maker’s recommended cold pressure. FMVSS No. 138 (TPMS) under-inflation warning threshold sets that performance target.
If you can’t read the placard right now, treat any passenger tire that’s down more than 6–8 PSI from its usual cold reading as “low” until you can confirm the spec.
Why low PSI changes how a car behaves
Under-inflation makes the sidewall flex more every mile. Flex creates heat. Too much heat weakens the tire from the inside.
Low PSI also reshapes the contact patch. The shoulders can carry more load than the center, so you wear edges faster and lose crisp steering. Fuel use often creeps up too, since the tire rolls with more drag.
Where to find the right PSI and what “cold” means
Your door-jamb placard lists a cold PSI for front and rear. “Cold” means the tire hasn’t been driven for a few hours, or it’s been driven only a short distance at low speed. Driving warms the air inside the tire and lifts the reading.
- Skip the sidewall number. That’s the tire’s maximum inflation rating, not your car’s target.
- Skip copying other cars. Same tire brand doesn’t mean same suspension, load, or placard spec.
If the placard is missing, check the owner’s manual. A dealer can also often pull the original label data for your VIN.
How low pressure shows up before you see a flat
Some signs point to one tire, others point to a general underfill.
Clues that often mean one tire is low
- Pulling left or right on a straight road.
- A thump that speeds up as you go faster.
- One corner of the car looks lower after it’s parked.
Clues that often mean several tires are low
- More road noise and a softer feel in corners.
- Braking that feels less sharp, especially in rain.
- Fuel use rising with no other change.
These cues aren’t perfect tests. They’re a nudge to grab a gauge before the tire gets hot and damaged.
Pressure ranges that help you decide what to do
Use your placard PSI as the anchor and treat the gap as the story. The table below shows how common drops tend to play out.
| Cold PSI vs placard | What it tends to feel like | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| At placard (0% low) | Normal ride and steering | Recheck monthly and before long drives |
| 5% low | Often no clear change | Top up when tires are cold |
| 10% low | Steering can feel a bit slow | Add air soon; recheck in a few days |
| 15% low | Ride feels softer; edge wear can start | Add air now; look for a puncture |
| 20% low | Handling feels mushy in corners | Limit speed; add air; plan a leak check |
| 25% low | TPMS warning is likely on | Fill to placard; inspect the tire closely |
| 30%+ low | Car can feel unstable; tire can overheat | Stop and assess; use a spare if needed |
| Near flat (under 15 PSI on many passenger tires) | Sidewall looks squashed; rim risk is high | Do not drive; inflate only to move to safety |
TPMS is a warning, not a gauge. Some cars need a short drive after filling before the light clears.
How temperature shifts change PSI
PSI drops as the air inside the tire cools and rises as it warms. That’s why a tire can read fine after a drive, then read low the next morning. Cold snaps often trigger TPMS lights on cars that were already a little under the placard spec.
Best habit: check pressure before you drive. If you check after driving, don’t bleed air out to match the placard number. Add air only when you’re below the target.
Common causes of low tire pressure
Most low-PSI cases come down to a leak or a slow loss over time:
- Slow puncture: nail or screw in the tread that leaks over days.
- Valve stem issue: cracked stem or loose valve core.
- Bead leak: corrosion where the tire seals to the wheel.
- Wheel damage: bent rim after a pothole hit.
- Normal seepage: gradual loss even with no visible damage.
If you want an official refresher on tire checks, recalls, and ratings, NHTSA Tire Safety (TireWise) resources is a solid reference.
How to check PSI so the reading is reliable
Consistency matters more than fancy tools. This routine works with any gauge:
- Park on level ground and let the car sit, then remove the valve cap.
- Press the gauge straight onto the valve and read the number.
- Compare the reading to the placard PSI for that axle.
- Add air in short bursts and recheck after each burst.
- Reinstall the cap to keep dirt and moisture out.
At a station, the tires may not be fully cold. That’s still fine for a practical top-up. Fill to the placard number, then recheck the next morning. If you’re a couple PSI over, leave it. If you’re far over, set it back to placard when cold.
When it’s okay to drive and when to stop
Think in two quick checks: how low is it, and what does the tire look like?
Often okay for a short drive to air
- The tire is within about 10–15% of placard.
- No bulges, cuts, or cords show on the sidewall.
- The car feels normal at city speeds.
Stop and sort it out right away
- The tire looks visibly low, or the rim is close to the ground.
- You feel a wobble, harsh vibration, or repeated thumping.
- The pressure is near the TPMS warning range and you’re heading to high speeds.
Driving on a soft tire can wreck the sidewall. That can turn a simple tread repair into a full replacement.
What to do when the TPMS light comes on
A steady TPMS light often means one or more tires are under the warning threshold. A flashing light that turns steady can mean a system fault, like a dead sensor battery.
- Check all four tires with a gauge.
- Fill each tire to the placard PSI, front and rear as listed.
- Drive a short distance so the system can update.
- If the light stays on after pressures are correct, check whether your spare is monitored.
If the light keeps flashing on start-up across several drives, a tire shop can scan the sensors to find the one that isn’t reporting.
Special cases that can fool you
Pressure targets assume a normal load. When you change how the car is used, low PSI can bite faster.
Heavy loads and towing
Extra weight increases tire flex and heat. Some door placards list a second pressure set for a loaded car, often with a higher rear number. If your placard shows that option, use it on days you’re hauling or towing.
Spare tires
Compact spares often want a much higher PSI than your regular tires. Check the spare’s sidewall and keep it at that number. A spare that has quietly bled down can leave you stuck even if the rest of the tires are perfect.
After tire service
Tires can come back from a shop a few PSI off your placard spec. Set them yourself at home when cold. It’s the cleanest way to know the baseline, so you can spot a slow loss later.
Symptoms, causes, and the first check that pays off
When low PSI keeps coming back, a fast visual scan plus one simple test usually narrows it down. Use this table as a starting point.
| What you notice | What it often points to | First check to do |
|---|---|---|
| One tire loses 2–5 PSI in a week | Slow puncture in the tread | Spray soapy water on the tread and watch for bubbles |
| Pressure drops right after a pothole hit | Bent rim lip or bead leak | Inspect the wheel edge; get the rim checked at a shop |
| All tires read low on a cold morning | Cooling air plus a small underfill | Fill to placard, then recheck the next morning |
| TPMS light returns within days | Leak that wasn’t found | Write down each tire’s PSI, then recheck in 48 hours |
| Valve area hisses or cap keeps loosening | Loose valve core or worn stem | Have the valve core tightened and the stem inspected |
| Slow loss on an older wheel, no nail found | Corrosion at the bead seat | Ask for bead cleaning and resealing during repair |
| Light flashes at start-up, then stays on | TPMS sensor not reporting | Scan sensors to find the failed unit |
| Edges wear faster than the center | Chronic under-inflation | Set cold PSI to placard and check weekly for a month |
A simple low-PSI checklist for the glovebox
- Check PSI once a month, plus before long drives.
- Check before you drive, not right after.
- Use the placard numbers, not the tire sidewall.
- After a hard pothole or curb hit, check PSI the same day.
- If one tire drops again after topping up, treat it like a leak and get it checked.
Once you anchor “low” to your placard spec and watch the size of the drop, you stop guessing. That’s the habit that keeps tires cooler, steadier, and far less likely to fail at speed.
References & Sources
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations (eCFR).“49 CFR 571.138 (FMVSS No. 138): Tire Pressure Monitoring Systems.”Sets the under-inflation warning performance target tied to a percentage drop from the placard PSI.
- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).“Tire Safety Ratings and Awareness (TireWise).”Official material on tire pressure checks, tread wear, and recalls.
