How To Check And Replace Tyres On A Range Rover Evoque: A Step-by-Step Guide

Your tyres are doing more work than you might realise. Every corner and every emergency stop loads through four contact patches no larger than your hand, and on a vehicle of the Evoque's weight, that matters. Get the Range Rover Evoque tyres right and the vehicle handles the way Land Rover intended. Get them wrong and the Evoque's capability starts working against you.

This guide covers correct sizes for both generations, recommended pressures, the best options for UK conditions, a proper inspection process and a clear explanation of what to do when a tyre goes flat with no spare in the boot. We stock a full range of Range Rover Evoque L538 parts and Range Rover Evoque L551 parts to keep your vehicle in shape between tyre changes.

What size tyres are on a Range Rover Evoque?  

Tyre size isn't just a number on the sidewall. It affects your speedometer accuracy and your ground clearance; on the second-generation Evoque, it can also interfere with the calibration of safety systems that depend on precise wheel speed data. Fitting the wrong size undermines a vehicle engineered to close tolerances.

The correct Range Rover Evoque tyres size varies by generation and trim level. The tables below give you a working reference, though you should always confirm against your door placard or owner's handbook before ordering.

First-Generation Evoque tyre sizes (L538, 2012 to 2018)
Wheel diameter Standard tyre size
18-inch 235/60 R18
19-inch 235/55 R19
20-inch 245/45 R20
Wheel diameter
18-inch
Standard tyre size
235/60 R18
Wheel diameter
19-inch
Standard tyre size
235/55 R19
Wheel diameter
20-inch
Standard tyre size
245/45 R20

The wheel size fitted to your L538 depends on the trim level and any factory options selected at the time of order. If you're sourcing tyres for a Range Rover Evoque 2016 model, all three sizes are plausible depending on specification: the door placard is the only reliable way to confirm which applies to your vehicle.

Second-Generation Evoque tyre sizes (L551, 2019 onwards)
Wheel diameter Standard tyre size
17-inch 225/65 R17
18-inch 235/60 R18
Wheel diameter
17-inch
Standard tyre size
225/65 R17
Wheel diameter
18-inch
Standard tyre size
235/60 R18

Higher-specification L551 variants run larger wheel and tyre combinations. As with the first generation, the door placard is the definitive source for your specific vehicle. Our Range Rover Evoque L551 parts pages cover the second-generation model in full.

How to read your tyre size code

The three-part code moulded into the sidewall tells you everything. Take 235/60 R18 as an example: 235 is the section width in millimetres, 60 is the aspect ratio expressed as a percentage of that width and R18 indicates radial construction on an 18-inch rim. The load index and speed rating follow, and these must meet or exceed Land Rover's specification for your variant. Fitting a lower-rated tyre than required affects your insurance cover; it's a corner worth not cutting.

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Understanding Range Rover Evoque tyre pressure  

Running at the wrong pressure is one of the most common causes of premature tyre wear, and it's almost entirely avoidable. Under-inflation generates heat in the carcass and concentrates load at the outer edges; over-inflation shrinks the contact patch, hardens the compound and makes the ride harsher than it needs to be. Neither does your fuel consumption any favours.

The recommended Range Rover Evoque tyres pressure varies by wheel size and load, so the manufacturer's figures in your door jamb sticker and owner's handbook are the ones to use. Pressures are given for cold tyres, meaning the vehicle hasn't been driven in the last couple of hours. A short motorway run can add several PSI to the reading, giving a false sense of security.

How the tyre pressure monitoring system works

The Evoque's tyre pressure monitoring system alerts you when pressure drops significantly in one or more tyres. The keyword is ‘significantly’: the warning typically triggers at a meaningful drop below the recommended level, so a slow, gradual leak can go undetected for some time before the light appears. Think of the system as a backup rather than a primary check.

A quality handheld gauge, used once a month and before any long journey, catches problems the system might miss. Forecourt gauges vary in accuracy; a decent gauge in the glovebox is a worthwhile investment.

What a tyre pressure warning light means

If the warning light comes on, pull over when it's safe and check all four tyres. A persistent warning after correcting pressures can indicate a faulty TPMS sensor requiring replacement. Sensors are specific to each wheel position on some Evoque variants, so it helps to know which one has triggered before visiting a specialist.

What are the best tyres for a Range Rover Evoque?

The best tyres for Range Rover Evoque use depend on where you drive and in what conditions. A city-based SE owner and a rural R-Dynamic driver have different requirements; the right answer for each isn't the same tyre.

Summer tyres: the default choice for UK roads

Summer tyres are the recommended tyre options for most UK Evoque owners using their vehicle on roads between spring and autumn. They're engineered for both dry and wet performance above around 7°C, with compounds that stay pliable and grippy in warm weather. On a vehicle of the Evoque's kerb weight, the gap between a premium compound and a budget equivalent shows up clearly in wet braking distances.

All-season tyres: year-round practicality

All-season tyres suit drivers who want year-round capability without the cost and storage demands of running two separate sets. They're a practical compromise for urban and mixed-road use across a British climate that rarely commits fully to either extreme. The trade-off is that they don't reach the peak performance of a dedicated seasonal tyre in either direction.

Winter tyres: when temperatures drop

When temperatures consistently sit below 7°C, winter tyre compounds stay soft and grippy where summer rubber stiffens and loses grip. If you use your Evoque on rural roads, farm tracks or in areas that see regular frost, the improvement in stopping distance makes a compelling case for a dedicated winter set.

Does the Range Rover Evoque have a spare tyre?  

The standard Evoque doesn't come with a spare wheel fitted. Instead, Land Rover supplies a tyre repair kit comprising a compressor and a sealant canister as the default equipment. A space saver spare wheel was available as a factory option on the L538 and remains available as a retailer-fit upgrade on both generations; if yours doesn't have one, it's worth retrofitting.

What the tyre repair kit can fix

The kit works by injecting sealant through the valve stem, then using the compressor to reinflate to the recommended pressure. Driving slowly after reinflation distributes the sealant and seals the puncture. It handles small tread area punctures effectively, typically up to around 4mm in diameter.

It won't work for sidewall damage, large cuts or a tyre that's lost significant pressure at speed. For those situations, you're looking at roadside recovery.

What to do after using the sealant

Once the sealant has been used, the tyre needs replacing. The sealant contaminates the interior of the tyre and the wheel bead area, making a permanent repair impossible. The sealant canister also needs replacing before the kit is serviceable again; check the expiry date on yours periodically, as the product degrades over time.

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How to check your Range Rover Evoque tyres

A proper inspection of your Range Rover Evoque tyres takes around ten minutes. Do it monthly; do it before a long journey; do it after any significant kerb strike or pothole impact. Here's a structured process to work through.

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Step 1: measure tread depth

The UK legal minimum is 1.6mm across the central three-quarters of the tyre's width around the full circumference. Most manufacturers recommend replacement at 3mm, and on a heavier SUV that's the threshold worth working to. A tread depth gauge gives you an accurate reading. For a quick check, insert a 20 pence coin into the tread groove: if the outer band of the coin is visible, the tyre is approaching or below the legal limit.

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Step 2: Inspect the sidewalls

Run your eye and your hand around the full circumference of each tyre. Bulges indicate internal structural damage, usually from a sharp impact. A bulging tyre is at immediate risk of failure; take it off the road. Cuts and cracking are also worth acting on, particularly if they're deep or widespread.

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Step 3: Read the wear patterns

Uneven wear is the tyre's way of telling you something's wrong elsewhere on the vehicle. The table below covers the most common patterns and what they indicate.

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Step 4: check the valve caps

A missing or damaged valve cap allows moisture and grit to reach the valve core, which causes slow leaks. Replacement caps cost very little and take seconds to fit.

Wear pattern Likely cause
Heavy wear on both outer edges Chronic under-inflation
Heavy wear across the centre Over-inflation
Feathering or one-sided shoulder wear Geometry or suspension issue
Cupping or scalloping Worn shock absorbers
Wear pattern
Heavy wear on both outer edges
Likely cause
Chronic under-inflation
Wear pattern
Heavy wear across the centre
Likely cause
Over-inflation
Wear pattern
Feathering or one-sided shoulder wear
Likely cause
Geometry or suspension issue
Wear pattern
Cupping or scalloping
Likely cause
Worn shock absorbers

If you're seeing any of these patterns, new tyres alone won't resolve the problem. Have the geometry or suspension inspected first, or you'll be back to the same result within a few thousand miles.

How to replace tyres on a Range Rover Evoque

Tyre fitting requires specialist equipment for mounting and balancing; on TPMS-equipped Evoques, the sensors also need programming when a tyre is changed. This makes it a job for a tyre specialist with compatible diagnostic tools, not a driveway operation.

Choosing the right replacement tyre

Replace like-for-like wherever possible: same size, same load index and speed rating, and ideally the same compound on both wheels of an axle. Mixing tyre types across an axle affects handling balance under hard braking and in wet-weather cornering. On the Evoque's all-wheel-drive system, significant diameter differences between tyres can also stress the transfer case over time.

If you're fitting after using the repair kit, the wheel needs thorough cleaning before the new tyre is mounted. Residual sealant on the bead seat prevents a good seal and causes ongoing pressure loss.

Suspension and steering components that affect tyre wear

Fitting good tyres to a vehicle with worn suspension is a false economy. Corroded ball joints, worn track rod ends and failed shock absorbers all affect geometry and accelerate uneven wear. Before investing in a new set of Range Rover Evoque tyres, it's worth giving the steering and suspension a proper inspection. We stock the parts you need for both generations: browse our Range Rover Evoque L538 parts or Range Rover Evoque L551 parts depending on your model.