Windshield Wiper Size Guide
Using the wrong wiper size is surprisingly common and causes streaking, gaps in coverage, and even blade interference. Your driver and passenger sides usually take different sizes. Here are the most popular vehicles and their correct wiper sizes.
Popular Vehicles — Wiper Sizes
| Vehicle | Years | Driver | Passenger | Rear |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toyota Camry | 2018-2026 | 26" | 18" | — |
| Honda Civic | 2016-2026 | 26" | 18" | — |
| Ford F-150 | 2015-2026 | 22" | 22" | — |
| Toyota Tacoma | 2016-2026 | 24" | 18" | — |
| Jeep Wrangler JL | 2018-2026 | 18" | 18" | 14" |
| Ford Bronco | 2021-2026 | 20" | 20" | 12" |
| Toyota 4Runner | 2010-2026 | 24" | 21" | 12" |
| Honda CR-V | 2017-2026 | 26" | 17" | 12" |
| Chevy Silverado | 2019-2026 | 22" | 22" | — |
| Toyota RAV4 | 2019-2026 | 26" | 16" | 12" |
| Subaru Outback | 2020-2026 | 26" | 17" | 14" |
| Jeep Grand Cherokee | 2022-2026 | 24" | 21" | 12" |
| Ram 1500 | 2019-2026 | 24" | 22" | — |
| Tesla Model 3 | 2017-2026 | 26" | 19" | — |
| Tesla Model Y | 2020-2026 | 26" | 16" | 14" |
⚠️ Don’t See Your Vehicle?
The easiest way to find your exact size: check your owner’s manual, measure your current blades, or use Amazon’s wiper blade finder (select your year/make/model and it filters to the right sizes).
How to Measure Wiper Blades
- Lift the wiper arm away from the windshield
- Measure from tip to tip of the rubber blade (not the arm)
- Round to the nearest inch—wipers come in even-inch increments (16", 17", 18", etc.)
- Measure both sides separately—they’re usually different lengths
Can You Use a Bigger Wiper?
Sometimes, yes. Going up 1 inch on the driver’s side can give you slightly more coverage. But test it first: if the blades hit each other or the blade runs off the edge of the glass, go back to stock size. Going smaller is never a good idea—you’ll have an unwiped strip in your field of vision.
Wiper Arm Connection Types
Most modern vehicles use one of these connections:
- J-hook (U-hook): The most common. A J-shaped metal hook on the arm. Most aftermarket wipers include a J-hook adapter.
- Pin arm: A small metal pin that clicks into the blade. Common on BMW, Volvo, and some Hondas.
- Bayonet: A push-button locking tab. Common on European vehicles and some GM trucks.
- Top lock (push button): A button-release mechanism used on many Chrysler/Jeep vehicles.
Good wipers like the Bosch ICON come with multiple adapters to fit most arm types. Cheaper blades sometimes only include a J-hook, which won’t work on newer vehicles with different connectors.
Now that you know your size, check our main rankings to pick the right blade, or read our beam vs conventional comparison to decide on blade type.