Bolt pattern cross-reference

Vehicles with a 6x139.7 bolt pattern

6×139.7 mm (6×5.5″) — 19 vehicles in our data share this pattern. A shared pattern means their wheels are worth checking, once you also confirm center bore and offset.

6x139.7 vehicles (6×5.5″)
VehicleYearsDetails
Cadillac Escalade 2021–present View →
Chevrolet Silverado 1500 1999–present View →
Chevrolet Suburban 2000–present View →
Chevrolet Tahoe 2000–present View →
Ford Bronco 2021–present (6th gen); the classic Bronco used 5x139.7 View →
Ford Ranger 2019–present (modern global Ranger) View →
GMC Sierra 1500 1999–present View →
GMC Yukon 2000–present View →
Infiniti QX80 2011–present View →
Jeep Wagoneer 2022–present View →
Lexus GX 2003–present View →
Lexus LX 2022–present (LX600, J310) View →
Nissan Armada 2004–present View →
Nissan Titan 2004–present View →
Ram 1500 2019–present (DT) View →
Toyota 4Runner 1996–present View →
Toyota Sequoia 2001–2007 (1st gen) View →
Toyota Tacoma 1995–present View →
Toyota Tundra 2000–2006 (1st gen) View →

Same pattern ≠ guaranteed swap

Every vehicle above bolts to a 6x139.7 hub, so they clear the first and biggest filter. But a wheel also has to match the center bore (or use hub-centric rings) and run a workable offset, with room for the brakes. Treat this list as your shortlist of what to measure — not a promise of a bolt-on fit.

FAQ

What vehicles have a 6x139.7 bolt pattern?

In our data, 19 vehicles use 6x139.7 (6×5.5″), including Cadillac Escalade, Chevrolet Silverado 1500, Chevrolet Suburban, Chevrolet Tahoe, Ford Bronco, Ford Ranger. More are being added.

Are 6x139.7 wheels interchangeable between these vehicles?

They share the 6x139.7 bolt pattern, which is the first requirement — but interchangeability also depends on center bore, offset, and brake clearance. Use this list to know what to check, then confirm those specs before fitting wheels from another vehicle.

What is 6x139.7 in inches?

6x139.7 equals 6×5.5″ — 139.7 mm is 5.5 inches across the pitch circle.

Vehicle lists reflect well-documented bolt patterns and are a starting reference. Confirm bolt pattern, center bore, and offset against the door-jamb sticker or owner's manual before buying or swapping wheels.