Trailer Tongue Weight Calculator: How Much Is Too Much?

🚛 Trailer Tongue Weight Calculator

Check if your hitch tongue weight is safe & within your vehicle’s towing capacity

Quick Presets
📏 Enter Your Trailer Data
✅ Tongue Weight Analysis Results
📊 Hitch Class Quick Reference
200 lb
Class I Max Tongue
350 lb
Class II Max Tongue
800 lb
Class III Max Tongue
1,000 lb
Class IV Max Tongue
2,000 lb
Class V Max Tongue
9–15%
Ideal Tongue % of GTW
600 lb
WDH Required Above
0.453
lbs to kg Factor
📋 Tongue Weight by Trailer Type
Trailer Type Typical GTW Tongue % Rule Typical Tongue Wt Tongue Wt (kg)
Boat Trailer (small)2,000 lb10%200 lb91 kg
Boat Trailer (large)5,000 lb10%500 lb227 kg
Pop-up Camper2,500 lb10–12%250–300 lb113–136 kg
Travel Trailer (small)5,000 lb10–12%500–600 lb227–272 kg
Travel Trailer (large)10,000 lb10–15%1,000–1,500 lb454–680 kg
Car Hauler10,000 lb10%1,000 lb454 kg
Horse Trailer12,000 lb12–15%1,440–1,800 lb653–816 kg
Utility Trailer3,500 lb10–12%350–420 lb159–190 kg
Flatbed Trailer16,000 lb10–12%1,600–1,920 lb726–871 kg
Enclosed Trailer7,000 lb10–12%700–840 lb317–381 kg
🚛 Hitch Class Specifications
Hitch Class Max GTW Max Tongue Wt Ball Size Common Vehicles
Class I2,000 lb200 lb1-7/8"Small cars, sedans
Class II3,500 lb350 lb1-7/8" or 2"Minivans, mid-size SUVs
Class III8,000 lb800 lb2" or 2-5/16"Full-size SUVs, trucks
Class IV10,000 lb1,000 lb2-5/16"HD trucks, large SUVs
Class V20,000 lb2,000 lb2-5/16" or 3"Heavy-duty trucks
🔄 Axle Count vs. Weight Distribution
Axle Config Tongue % of GTW GTW 5,000 lb Tongue GTW 10,000 lb Tongue Notes
Single Axle10–15%500–750 lb1,000–1,500 lbWider range acceptable
Tandem Axle10–12%500–600 lb1,000–1,200 lbMore stable, tighter range
Triple Axle8–10%400–500 lb800–1,000 lbHeavy trailers, lower %
💡 Tongue Weight Tips
🎯 The 9–15% Rule: Your tongue weight should be between 9% and 15% of the total Gross Trailer Weight (GTW). Below 9% risks trailer sway; above 15% overloads your hitch and rear axle.
⚖️ Use a Tongue Weight Scale: For accurate measurement, use a dedicated tongue weight scale or weigh your trailer fully loaded at a public scale. Estimated weights can be off by hundreds of pounds.
🔧 Weight Distribution Hitch (WDH): If your tongue weight exceeds 600 lbs (or 10% of your tow vehicle’s GVWR), a weight distribution hitch is strongly recommended to redistribute load across all axles.
📦 Load Placement Matters: Move heavy cargo forward of the trailer axle to increase tongue weight, or rearward to decrease it. Each 100 lb shift of 1,000 lbs of cargo over the axle changes tongue weight noticeably.

The tongue weight of a trailer is simply the pressure or force on the hitch, when the front part of the trailer rests on the vehicle for towing. Think of it this way: if you had to lift the front of that trailer off the ground the force needed would be the tongue weight. Getting the right values matters, because that affects your safety, the comfort of the trip and whether your tow vehicle truly fits to handle that, what you need of it.

Most folks follow a rule of thumb: the tongue weight should be around 10 to 15 percent of the total weight of the loaded trailer. An interesting fact is, that many vehicles limit their tongue weight to exactly 10 percent of their maximum tow rating. Take a sample vehicle, that can tow 3 500 pounds, it allows a maximum of 350 pounds for tongue weight.

What Trailer Tongue Weight Is and How to Check It

Here is that 10-percent limit. If you now add a fully loaded trailer weighing 3 650 pounds, you will find almost 547 puonds of tongue weight, if you aim for the 15-percent ideal spot.

Here is where things become tricky. If you put too much weight on the tongue, you press down the back of your tow vehicle, what hurts the steering and handling. If the tongue weight is too little…

Or, sky curse, if more weight rests behind the axles of the trailer than before them, then you risk swaying of the trailer, that worsens at higher speed. Finding the right balance truly depends on your particular vehicle and the setup of the trailer.

The specs from the maker about the wet tongue weight can fool you, honestly. They commonly ignore batteries, propane tanks and other gear, that adds real weight. I saw trailers advertised with wet tongue weights in the low 300s, but when you truly load them and add weight, you hit more than 700 pounds.

The place, wear you put your cargo in the trailer, makes a big difference. If you put the heavier items forward, you keep the tongue weight there, where it belongs.

You have some ways to measure. A bathroom scale works well for lighter setups, if you build a lever with a tube and do the math. Cat scales also are reliable…

They have three separate pads for weighing the front axle, back axle and the trailer. Another method is weigh the tow vehicle before and after the hookup of the trailer, then do the subtraction.

Weight distribution bars do not truly lower your tongue weight. What they do, is spread the load more evenly across all axles. Your total tongue weight includes everything, that rests on the tongue of the trailer, plus anything in the truck bed of your truck behind the back axle.

Real numbers almost always beat the claims of the makers, so knowingly leave margin in your calculations about the possible load. Before you even think to buy a trailer, weigh your fully loaded truck at a scale.

Even small changes move things around. Moving a spare tire or rearranging the cargo can alter your tongue weight a lot. A longer trailer also lowers thetongue weight through basic leverage.

Trailer Tongue Weight Calculator: How Much Is Too Much?

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