Positive Offset
The hub face sits toward the outside of the wheel. Most modern cars use positive offset. Higher ET usually places more of the wheel inward.
June 10, 2026 5 min read
Wheel Offset Explained
Offset is the distance between the wheel centreline and the mounting face. It decides whether the wheel sits inward, flush, or pushed outward, but it never works alone.
Written by Kevin Wang, Founder & Lead Engineer - La Forge Industries - Updated
Wheel offset (ET) is the distance in millimetres between the wheel centreline and the hub mounting face. Higher positive offset tucks the wheel inward. Lower offset moves it outward. Negative offset pushes the mounting face behind the centreline — deep dish, aggressive stance.
Offset only makes sense together with wheel width, tyre size, brake clearance, suspension clearance, centre bore, ride height, and the car it's going on.
Imagine slicing the wheel from inner barrel to outer lip. The purple dashed line is the wheel centreline. The gold line is the hub mounting face. The distance between them is the offset.
The middle of the wheel width. Offset is measured from this line.
The mounting pad that touches the car hub. ET describes where this pad sits.
Moving the wheel outward can create a flush look, but too much creates poke and rub risk.
Moving inward can hit suspension, strut, control arm, liner or inner barrel clearance.
The hub face sits toward the outside of the wheel. Most modern cars use positive offset. Higher ET usually places more of the wheel inward.
The hub face sits on the wheel centreline. This is less common on modern passenger cars but useful as the reference point for understanding ET.
The hub face sits behind the centreline. This pushes the wheel outward strongly and is more common on deep-lip, off-road or wide-body applications.
An 18x8.5 ET35 and an 18x10 ET35 do not sit the same way. The offset number is the same, but the wider wheel adds barrel on both sides of the centreline. That can reduce inner clearance and increase outward poke at the same time.
ET35 is not a full fitment. Width, diameter, tyre size, brake profile, hub bore and centre-cap pocket all change whether the wheel works.
Changing from ET45 to ET30 moves the wheel mounting relationship outward by 15 mm, before considering any width change.
Adding 1 inch of width adds about 12.7 mm inward and 12.7 mm outward if offset stays the same.
Real cars show why LFI does not quote by offset alone. A clean stance still has to clear the tyre shoulder, brake caliper, fender, suspension and daily road use.
Use the LFI Concave Slider to see how offset and width change visual face depth. It is a visual education tool, not a final fitment approval.
| Fitment factor | What offset changes | What still needs checking |
|---|---|---|
| Outer stance | Lower ET moves the wheel outward. | Fender clearance, tyre shoulder, ride height, alignment. |
| Inner clearance | Higher ET usually moves the wheel inward. | Strut, arm, liner, inner barrel and brake package. |
| Brake clearance | Offset can affect spoke and caliper relationship. | Caliper template, spoke profile, barrel profile and backpad. |
| Concave appearance | Lower ET and more width can create more face depth. | Load rating, spoke section, hub pad, brake clearance and vehicle limits. |
| Handling feel | Large offset changes can alter scrub radius and steering feel. | Platform geometry, tyre width, alignment and intended use. |
| Singapore road use | Offset affects whether the setup looks flush or protrudes. | Practical clearance, road comfort, wet-weather grip and current inspection expectations. |
The same model can have different brakes, ride height, tyres, alignment and body tolerance. A posted offset may not work on your exact car.
Two tyres with the same printed size can have different shoulders. That changes fender clearance and how aggressive the same wheel appears.
It looks aggressive in one photo. On real roads, rubbing, tramlining, and road debris up the body get old fast.
ET is the wheel offset measurement in millimetres. It describes the distance between the wheel centreline and the hub mounting face.
Usually yes. A higher positive offset generally moves the wheel inward, but the final position also depends on wheel width and tyre size.
Usually yes. Lower offset generally moves the wheel outward and can create a more flush stance, but too much can cause poke, rubbing and steering or suspension clearance issues.
Yes. A wider wheel with the same offset adds width inward and outward, so it can reduce inner clearance and increase outer poke even when the ET number is unchanged.
It can. Brake clearance depends on the caliper template, spoke shape, barrel profile, backpad and offset together. This is why custom forged wheels should be checked around the actual brake package.
No. Lower offset can help create more visual face depth, but concave design also depends on width, diameter, brake clearance, hub pad, load rating and spoke structure.
There isn't one number. LFI starts with your specific car — platform, brake package, tyre target, ride height, stance, and what you actually use the car for.
Send your vehicle model, year, trim, brake package, current wheel and tyre size, desired tyre size, ride height, alignment notes, photos of current stance and whether the car is used for daily, track, show, EV, SUV or long-distance driving.
LFI designs custom forged wheels around real fitment data: vehicle platform, brake clearance, tyre target, load rating, centre bore, hub pad, spoke structure and the stance you want to live with.
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