Truck Fitment
A correct package should start with the truck application and bolt pattern, then match wheel diameter, width, offset, tire size, and tire load direction around the build.
COMPLETE DUALLY PACKAGE GUIDE
Complete dually wheel and tire packages help remove the guesswork from building a heavy-duty truck setup. Instead of shopping wheels and tires separately, package shopping lets you focus on the look, fitment, tire type, and stance that match your truck.
A correct package should start with the truck application and bolt pattern, then match wheel diameter, width, offset, tire size, and tire load direction around the build.
20 inch, 22 inch, and 24 inch packages are common for custom dually trucks. The right package depends on suspension height, towing needs, ride comfort, and overall stance.
Use packages when you want the wheel and tire setup paired together, especially if you are comparing all-terrain, mud-terrain, or highway tire options.
Package pages are strong for buyers who want a finished solution. These shoppers usually care about fitment confidence, visual balance, tire choice, shipping path, and whether the setup works for towing, daily driving, or a custom build.
A complete setup is often easier than buying separately because the wheel and tire pairing can be checked together. It also gives the buyer a clearer total price before adding extras such as TPMS, lug kits, or shipping options.
Always verify your exact year, model, axle, bolt pattern, wheel width, offset, tire size, tire clearance, and load needs before ordering. If you are unsure, start with the Year Make Model search so the store can narrow the results before you compare final style and price.
Clean black wheels for a modern heavy-duty stance.
Bright polished wheels for a classic dually show look.
Bold spoke designs built for custom dually builds.
A package helps match the wheel and tire setup together, which reduces guesswork and gives a clearer finished build direction.
Many packages are built with towing in mind, but tire load rating, wheel specs, and fitment still need to be verified before purchase.
Common package tire types include all-terrain, mud-terrain, highway-terrain, and hybrid tread options depending on the truck build.
Start with the truck fitment and wheel size, then choose the tire style and height that support your use case.