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RivianTrackr Tire Guide Update Adds Reviews, AI Search and New Compare Tools

I’ve been working behind the scenes on a pretty big update to the RivianTrackr Tire Guide, and today all of it officially goes live. This isn’t just a few tweaks or visual polish, it’s a major step toward turning the Tire Guide into something that feels less like a database and more like a living tool built by and for the Rivian community.
For anyone who just wants the quick rundown, here’s what’s new:
- Leave star ratings and written reviews for any tire
- No account required to submit reviews (admin approval keeps things clean)
- New AI Search that recommends tires using natural language
- Massive mobile experience improvements (85% of RivianTrackr traffic is mobile)
- Favorite tires feature for logged in users
- New “Officially Reviewed” filter
- New sorting options like Most Reviewed and Newest Added
- 190+ Rivian compatible tires and ready for R2 support
- Unique shareable link for every tire
- Fully redesigned compare page, now supports up to 4 tires
- Share or print comparison pages
The biggest addition is community reviews. You can now rate any tire out of five stars and leave a written review sharing your real world experience. You don’t even need a RivianTrackr account, just select a tire, click Write Review, and start typing. Name and email are required for security, and all reviews go through approval so the system stays useful instead of turning into spam chaos.

One feature I’m especially excited about is the new AI Search. Instead of guessing which filters to use, you can simply type what you’re looking for like you would talk to another owner. Want the most efficient highway tire for an R1T or something more aggressive for R1S adventures? Ask it naturally and the guide will recommend tires and show results instantly.
A huge focus of this update was mobile. Around 85% of RivianTrackr traffic comes from phones, so the Tire Guide has been rebuilt to feel mobile first instead of desktop squeezed onto a smaller screen. Navigation is easier, scrolling feels cleaner, comparisons work better, and overall performance is faster whether you’re browsing from the couch, garage, or standing inside a tire shop trying to make a decision.

If you have a RivianTrackr account, you can now favorite tires and quickly return to them later from the Tire Guide navigation. There’s also a new Officially Reviewed filter highlighting tires that have full RivianTrackr reviews attached, making it easier to find tested options.
Sorting options now include Most Reviewed and Newest Added, and the database continues to grow with over 190 tires compatible with R1T and R1S already live. The system is also ready for R2 as soon as specs are finalized.
Every tire now has its own unique URL, making sharing incredibly easy using the Share icon on each tire image. The compare page also got a complete redesign, letting you compare up to four tires at once, share the comparison with friends, or even print it if you want something physical to bring with you.
RivianTrackr continues partnering with TireRack and SimpleTire, so if you purchase tires through the affiliate links in the guide, you’re directly supporting the work that goes into building and maintaining tools like this.

I’m genuinely excited about where the Tire Guide is headed. There’s a lot more planned, and as always, feedback from the community drives what comes next. If you have ideas or spot something that could be improved, reach out anytime at [email protected].
And if you’re a true nerd like me and want to follow along with how the Tire Guide evolves behind the scenes, you can also follow the public Tire Guide GitHub page where I share updates, improvements, and the ongoing development process in real time.
The goal has always been simple, build the best tire resource anywhere for Rivian owners, and this update feels like a big leap forward.

Great! I really need advice on replacing my 22″ scorpions with something, anything to improve the ride quality and cabin boom.
This more of a think about it for the future thing related to the Rivian R2. I’ve been looking at the BF Goodrich tires that were on the initial press review cars and other tires the same size. I currently run KO2s on a Jeep Wrangler and saw that a KO3 is available now that is in the R2 size. Obviously, noise would go up, on road handling and range would suffer, but it is a more competent and durable off road. Would love to see estimates of range, noise and handling changes. Thanks