28 mm road bike tire pressure chart

Recommended pressures for 28 mm (700×28) road tires by rider weight — the consensus of the SRAM AXS, Silca Pro and Pirelli Cycl-e ID calculators, computed for typical rough tarmac (the default road surface in all three calculators) with a 9 kg bike.

Quick answer · 75 kg rider

Start at 62 psi front / 66 psi rear (tubeless) or 65 / 68 psi with tubes, then adjust ±2 psi by feel.

Pressure by rider weight

Rider weightTubelessWith tubes
FrontRearFrontRear
50 kg (110 lb)46494851
55 kg (121 lb)49525255
60 kg (132 lb)53555558
65 kg (143 lb)56595861
70 kg (154 lb)59626265
75 kg (165 lb)62666568
80 kg (176 lb)65696871
85 kg (187 lb)68727175
90 kg (198 lb)71757478
95 kg (209 lb)74787781
100 kg (220 lb)77828084
105 kg (231 lb)80858387
110 kg (243 lb)83888690

All values in psi (divide by 14.5 for bar). Assumes a 9 kg bike and hooked rims. On hookless rims, SRAM/Zipp cap pressure at 73 psi — heavier riders on 28 mm tires will hit that ceiling.

What each calculator says

For a 75 kg rider on 28 mm tubeless, the three tools land 13.8 psi apart on the front wheel. That spread is normal — each brand optimises for something different.

CalculatorFront psiRear psi
Silca Pro63.567.8
SRAM AXS54.658.8
Pirelli Cycl-e ID68.469.9
psi.bike consensus6266
Get the exact number for your setup.

The chart assumes a 9 kg bike on typical rough tarmac (the default road surface in all three calculators). The calculator lets you set bike weight, seven surface types, hookless rims and tubeless — and ask follow-up questions.

Open the calculator pre-filled →

Common questions

What tire pressure should I run on 28 mm road tires?

It depends on your weight. A 75 kg rider on 28 mm (700×28) tubeless tires should start around 62 psi front and 66 psi rear on typical rough tarmac (the default road surface in all three calculators). Use the chart above to find your weight, then fine-tune by feel.

Should front and rear pressure be different?

Yes. More of your weight sits over the rear wheel, so all three calculators recommend a lower front pressure — typically 4 psi less at this tire width.

How much lower can I go with tubeless on 28 mm tires?

Roughly 3–4 psi. Without an inner tube there is no pinch-flat risk, so the calculators subtract a small margin. The chart shows both tubeless and tubed columns.

Why do SRAM, Silca and Pirelli give different numbers?

Each brand models the problem differently: SRAM weights compliance, Silca optimises rolling resistance over surface roughness, and Pirelli scales strongly with rider weight. On this setup they spread across 13.8 psi (front). psi.bike shows the consensus of all three.

Values are computed from psi.bike's calibrated models of the SRAM AXS, Silca Pro and Pirelli Cycl-e ID calculators and are starting points, not guarantees. Always respect the maximum pressure printed on your tire sidewall and rim, and adjust for conditions.