How Old Are Your Tires?
Snap the sidewall. Know the truth.
Uses a free Groq API key for AI vision + NHTSA safety search.
Sign up at console.groq.com/keys (takes 30 seconds). Your key stays in your browser — we never see it.
Point your camera at the tire sidewall. Flashlight turns on automatically. AI reads the DOT code, tire size, brand, model, speed rating, and more.
AI calculates tire age, decodes all specs, checks NHTSA recalls, searches for known issues, and gives you a clear safety verdict. Know in seconds if it's time to replace.
Tires expire after 6 years regardless of tread depth. The rubber compounds degrade from the inside out, even if the tire has never been driven on. NHTSA recommends replacement at 6 years, and most manufacturers agree.
Tire-related crashes happen annually in the US. Aged, underinflated, and worn tires are among the leading causes. A blowout at highway speed can be fatal — and it's almost always preventable.
Most people have no idea tires have a manufacture date stamped on them. The DOT code on your tire sidewall is its birth certificate — four digits that tell you exactly when it was made.
The last four digits of the DOT code are the date: first two = week, last two = year. "2319" means week 23 of 2019. Every tire has one. Now you know where to look.
There is no TireOrNOT server. This is a static site on Cloudflare's CDN. Your tire photos go directly from your browser to Groq AI using your personal API key. We never see your photos, DOT codes, or results.
Don't take our word for it — open Developer Tools → Network tab and see for yourself.
TireOrNOT works as a standalone app on your phone — no app store needed.
This tool is free forever. If it saved you from driving on old tires, consider supporting the project.
This tool is part of a suite of 10+ free AI-powered scanners.
Explore the orNot AI Suite →Safety Check uses AI-powered web search to analyze your tire against multiple safety databases — giving you a comprehensive report in seconds.
It checks:
TireOrNOT is a visual scanning tool, not a professional inspection. AI can accurately read the DOT code and decode tire markings, but cannot measure tread depth or detect internal damage. Always have tires inspected by a qualified technician for safety-critical decisions.
Know someone driving on old tires? Share TireOrNOT so they can check before their next road trip.