RV Tire Replacement
On-site RV tire replacement for Class A, Class C, and fifth-wheel rigs across Central Florida. Campground, storage lot, or driveway.

Most RV owners know they need new tires but put it off. When the tire blew on your Class A on I-4 near Sanford, you realized the wait wasn't worth it. We replace RV tires on-site — campgrounds, storage lots, your driveway, wherever the rig is parked. Class A motorhomes on 22.5-inch wheels get the same treatment as commercial trucks: we carry 11R22.5 and 295/80R22.5. Smaller Class C and B+ units typically run LT245/75R16 or 225/75R16 depending on the chassis. Age is the real factor with RV tires — anything over 6 years old should come off regardless of tread depth.
What We Handle
- Class A and Class C motorhome tires
- Fifth wheel and travel trailer service
- Full-set and single-tire replacement
- Age-based replacement recommendations
- 11R22.5 and 295/80R22.5 stocked for Class A
Calls We Get Every Week
Class A blowout on I-4 near Sanford
A 40-foot diesel pusher has a tire failure on I-4 eastbound. The coach is safely on the shoulder but the 22.5-inch tire is shredded. We respond with an 11R22.5 replacement and get the rig rolling.
Full-set replacement before a long trip
A Class C owner in Port Orange is planning a 3,000-mile summer run and wants all six tires inspected. Three are over 7 years old. We replace the aged tires at his driveway before he leaves.
Fifth wheel storage lot check
An RV owner pulls his fifth wheel out of an Ormond Beach storage facility after 8 months and notices two tires look low. We meet him at the lot, find one with a slow leak and one with dry rot, and handle both.
Common RV Tires Questions
How old is too old for RV tires?
Six years is the practical limit in Florida regardless of tread depth. The heat, UV, and storage cycles cause rubber degradation that doesn't always show visibly. At 7+ years, we recommend replacement without exception.
Do you come to RV parks and campgrounds?
Yes. Campgrounds, RV resorts, storage facilities, and driveways. We've handled RV tires at Jetty Park, Blue Spring State Park, and plenty of private RV parks across Central Florida.
Do I need to replace all RV tires at once?
Not always. If you have one failed tire and the others are reasonably aged and in good condition, a single replacement is fine. If the others are within a year or two of the 6-year limit, doing the full set makes sense.
What sizes do Class A motorhomes use?
Most Class A coaches on commercial chassis run 11R22.5 or 295/80R22.5. Smaller Class A units may run 225/70R19.5 or similar. Class C motorhomes on Ford or Mercedes chassis use LT-series tires.
Can you handle RV tires at a roadside blowout?
Yes. When a Class A has a tire failure on I-4 or I-95, we respond the same way we do for commercial trucks — with the right size, the right equipment, and safety lighting for highway work.
Have a different question? Call (386) 566-7339 — Dustin is happy to talk through it.