Truck Lift Height Calculator

Plan truck lift visuals using clear inputs. Model front, rear, rake, and tire diameter changes. Show persuasive results, graphs, and exportable reports for campaigns.

Calculator Inputs

Reset

Example Data Table

Use these sample setups for demos, sales sheets, landing pages, or upgrade package comparisons.

Scenario Front Lift Rear Lift Stock Tire New Tire Estimated Avg Gain Message Angle
Mild Leveling Package 2.0 in 1.0 in 31.0 in 32.0 in 2.00 in Clean daily-driver stance
Balanced Trail Package 3.0 in 2.0 in 31.0 in 33.0 in 3.50 in Strong all-around upgrade
Showcase Premium Build 4.0 in 3.5 in 32.0 in 35.0 in 5.25 in High-impact visual stance

Formula Used

Tire Radius Gain = (New Tire Diameter − Stock Tire Diameter) ÷ 2

Front Total Gain = Front Suspension Lift + Tire Radius Gain

Rear Total Gain = Rear Suspension Lift + Tire Radius Gain

New Front Fender Height = Stock Front Fender Height + Front Total Gain

New Rear Fender Height = Stock Rear Fender Height + Rear Total Gain

New Axle Clearance = Stock Axle Clearance + Tire Radius Gain

Rake Angle = arctan((Rear Fender Height − Front Fender Height) ÷ Wheelbase)

This model estimates visual lift change, axle clearance gain, and body stance. It is ideal for marketing pages, product comparisons, and package planning. Real-world results can vary with suspension geometry, load, wheel offset, and tire brand dimensions.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select inches or millimeters.
  2. Enter current front and rear fender heights.
  3. Enter current axle clearance and wheelbase.
  4. Add planned front and rear suspension lift values.
  5. Enter stock and new tire diameters.
  6. Click the calculate button.
  7. Review gain, rake, clearance, and stance outputs.
  8. Use the chart and exports in presentations or campaign assets.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does truck lift height mean here?

It means the estimated increase in body and stance height from suspension lift and tire size changes. The calculator also shows axle clearance gain separately.

2. Why does tire diameter affect lift results?

A larger tire raises the axle by half the tire diameter increase. That is why tire size directly changes clearance numbers.

3. Does suspension lift increase axle clearance?

Not usually. Suspension lift raises body-related measurements more than axle clearance. Axle clearance mainly increases when tire diameter increases.

4. Is this calculator suitable for exact fitment decisions?

No. It is an estimation tool. Use it for planning, messaging, and package comparison. Confirm final fitment with real suspension, wheel, and tire specs.

5. Can I use millimeters instead of inches?

Yes. Select millimeters in the unit field. The calculator converts values consistently and displays all results in the chosen unit.

6. Why are front and rear lift inputs separate?

Separate values help model leveling kits, balanced lift kits, or rear-biased setups. This produces better rake and stance estimates.

7. How does rake angle help marketing content?

Rake angle helps describe vehicle stance visually. It supports product pages, ad copy, and before-versus-after comparisons with stronger clarity.

8. Can I export the calculation results?

Yes. You can download a CSV file for spreadsheets and a PDF file for reports, proposals, or promotional documents.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.