Most people judge a tyre by its tread, the grooved rubber that grips the road, and assume that as long as there is plenty of tread left, the tyre is fine. In most of the world that is roughly true. In the UAE it is only half the story. Out here, a tyre’s age can matter just as much as its tread, because our heat and sunshine break the rubber down from the inside even when a tyre has barely been used. The reassuring part is that every tyre tells you exactly how old it is, if you know where to look. Let us show you how, step by step, and explain why it matters so much in this climate.
- Every tyre carries a four-digit date code showing the week and year it was made.
- In UAE heat, plan to replace tyres at around five to six years old, whatever the tread looks like.
- A tyre that looks almost new can still be dangerously old inside.
- Always check the date before buying, especially with discounted or used tyres.
Where do you find a tyre’s age?
Every tyre has its date of birth stamped into the sidewall, which is the smooth side wall of the tyre. Look for the letters DOT followed by a string of numbers and letters. The part you care about is the last four digits, because those four numbers are the date the tyre was made.
The first two digits are the week of the year and the last two are the year. So a tyre marked 2623 was made in the 26th week of 2023, which is roughly the end of June that year. A tyre marked 0125 was made in the first week of 2025. If you ever find a tyre with only three digits in that position, it was made before the year 2000 and has no place on a moving car.
Why can the date code be hard to find?
Because the full date code is often only printed on one side of the tyre, and sometimes it is on the inner side facing under the car. You may need to look on both faces, or turn the steering to full lock to bring the inner sidewall into view. Take a photo on your phone if it is awkward to read in the sun.
It takes a few seconds once you know it is there, and we are always happy to read it for you in seconds during a visit if you would rather not crouch down on a hot day. There is no charge for that, and it is a sensible thing to ask for whenever your car is in for any work.
Why does a tyre’s age matter so much in the UAE?
Because heat and sunlight age rubber from the inside, regardless of how much tread is left. Tyre rubber is not just rubber. It is mixed with oils and special compounds that keep it soft and flexible so it can grip the road. Constant high heat, strong sunlight and big day-to-night temperature swings slowly dry those oils out, a process the industry calls ageing or perishing.
Think of it like an elastic band left on a sunny windowsill for a year. It looks much the same at a glance, but it has gone hard and brittle and will snap under strain. An aged tyre grips less, cracks more easily and is far more likely to fail under a hot summer load, even with plenty of tread remaining. That is exactly why we sometimes advise replacing a tyre that, to the eye, still looks perfectly healthy. It is not an upsell, it is the heat doing invisible work.
How long do tyres really last in the UAE?
As a general rule the industry suggests replacing tyres at six years and treating ten years as an absolute maximum. In the Gulf climate, though, we would gently steer you towards the shorter end, around five to six years from the date the tyre was made, not the date you bought it.
The reason for that gap is important. A tyre that has sat in a warehouse for two or three years before being fitted is already part way through its safe life before it has turned a single wheel. So a tyre you bought two years ago might actually be four or five years old. Our fuller explanation of how long a tyre can last walks through the reasoning, but the simple takeaway is to count from the manufacture date, not the purchase date.
Why should you check the date before buying a tyre?
Because the manufacture date directly affects how much usable life you are actually getting for your money. This is the single tip that saves first-time buyers the most worry. When you buy, ask for the manufacture date and check it yourself on the sidewall before the tyre is fitted.
Be especially careful with heavily discounted stock and used or part worn tyres, where old age and hidden damage are common and not always disclosed. A bargain tyre that is already four years old is not really a bargain, because you are buying only a year or two of safe life. If you are buying for the first time, our guide to everything you need to know about buying car tyres is a calm place to start, and fitting a fresh set of quality tyres before the summer peak is the safest and most cost-effective move.
Do spare tyres and barely used cars need checking too?
Yes, and these are the two cases people forget most. A spare wheel that has lived under the boot floor for years, never touched by the road, still ages with time and heat. The day you finally need it is the worst day to discover it has gone hard and cracked, so include it in your checks.
The same is true for a car that is hardly driven, perhaps a second vehicle that mostly sits parked. Low mileage does not mean young tyres. If the rubber is six years old it is six years old, whether it has covered five thousand kilometres or fifty thousand, and in this heat the age is what counts.
Here is something worth knowing as a car owner. Every set of four tyres at Saeedi Pro comes with four services included at no extra cost: wheel balancing, wheel alignment, tyre rotation and nitrogen filling. That matters because a tyre is only as good as the way it is fitted and set up, and those four jobs are exactly what make a new tyre last and stay safe in the heat. It applies to every tyre brand we stock. You can see the current deals on our tyre offers page.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Where exactly do I find the date code?
On the sidewall of the tyre, look for the letters DOT and read the last four digits. It is often printed on only one side, so check the inner face too, or turn the wheels to full lock to bring it into view.
Q: Does my warranty start from the manufacture date or the date I bought the tyre?
Policies vary between brands and sellers, so ask at the point of sale. Whatever the warranty says, the manufacture date is what governs how quickly the rubber ages, so it is the number to watch.
Q: My tyres look perfect but they are seven years old. Should I replace them?
In UAE heat, yes. The weakening caused by age happens inside the rubber and is not always visible from the outside, so a good-looking older tyre can still be unsafe at speed.
Q: Do spare tyres age as well?
Yes. A spare that has never touched the road still perishes with time and heat. Check its date too, because the day you need it is the worst day to discover it has gone hard and cracked.
Q: Is a slightly older new tyre a problem?
A tyre made within roughly the last year is perfectly fine. The concern is stock that has already sat for several years before being fitted, so just check the date before agreeing to buy.
Q: Can I tell a tyre’s age just by looking at the tread?
No, and this is the common mistake. Tread shows wear, not age. A tyre can have deep tread and still be dangerously old, which is why the date code matters as much as the tread depth here.
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