Glossary

GAWR

Last reviewed: 2026-05-20

Source review note: This term covers a compliance, regulatory, or enforcement topic where current rules, annual updates, or carrier policy may affect the correct answer. Use this as background only. Verify applicable regulations and carrier policy before making decisions.

Gross Axle Weight Rating — the maximum rated weight for a single axle system as set by the vehicle manufacturer, accounting for the combined capacity of the suspension components, axle housing, wheel bearings, wheels, and structural connections to the frame. GAWR appears on the vehicle certification label for each axle position separately — front and rear axles typically have different ratings. The GAWR is a manufacturer-certified limit and cannot be raised by changing tires alone. Both GAWR and tire load capacity apply simultaneously; the lower of the two controls the maximum permissible axle load.

Tire capacity does not increase GAWR, and GAWR does not increase tire capacity — both limits apply independently, and exceeding either is not acceptable. A fleet that installs higher-rated tires on a trailer to support a heavier load must still verify that the trailer axle GAWR allows the additional weight. The vehicle certification label GAWR is set at the time of manufacture; it cannot be increased without a manufacturer re-certification process. Operating above GAWR may create compliance exposure during a roadside inspection — verify the applicable consequences in carrier policy and current regulations.

Real-World Use

A trailer owner installs Load Range H tires on an axle that previously had Load Range G tires, believing the higher-rated tires allow carrying more cargo. The tires do have more rated capacity — but the axle GAWR on the trailer certification label has not changed. Operating at a load that exceeds the GAWR is still a violation of the trailer's certified rating regardless of tire capacity. A weight-station inspector will check axle weight against the trailer GAWR, not against tire capacity alone.

Reference Sources

Sources used for context and verification of regulatory thresholds, inspection criteria, and compliance references on this page.

What to Pair It With

Read this term with the full tire sidewall, vehicle rating information, manufacturer documentation, and the actual condition of the tire.

This site is for general information only. It does not replace professional tire service, DOT compliance advice, tire manufacturer instructions, vehicle manufacturer recommendations, or fleet policy.