Best Tires for SCCA Street Touring Class

Street Touring (ST) classes share the same 200TW tire minimum as Street class but allow significantly more modifications to the car — coilovers, larger wheels, some engine work. The tire itself remains one of the biggest performance variables even in ST, where the cars are faster and more capable.

Street Touring Sub-Classes

ClassFull NameTypical Cars
STRStreet Touring RoadsterMX-5 Miata, S2000, Z4, 124 Spider
STXStreet Touring XGR86/BRZ, Civic Type R, WRX, GTI
STHStreet Touring HatchCivic Si, Focus ST/RS, Golf GTI
STSStreet Touring SportMiata NA/NB, older Civic, CRX
STFStreet Touring FrontFront-wheel drive cars under 2500 lbs

The Tire Rule in Street Touring

All Street Touring sub-classes require 200TW or higher tires. No R-compounds. The same tires competitive Street class drivers run — RE71RS, A052, RT660 — dominate Street Touring as well. The difference in ST is that you can often run a larger, wider tire because the class allows larger wheels and more suspension travel than stock.

Best Tires for Street Touring

Best Overall Editor's Pick
Falken Azenis RT660
200TW · Strong grip, best tread life of the category, works well across temperatures. The current value champion in ST.
~$140–$230per tire
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Best for STS (Small Sizes)
Bridgestone Potenza RE71RS
200TW · Available in smaller sizes like 205/50R15 that STS cars (older Miatas, Civics) need. Proven and consistent.
~$150–$250per tire
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Sizing Advantage in Street Touring

Because ST allows coilovers and often wider wheels than Street class, you may be able to run a wider tire than on the same car in Street. Verify your specific sub-class rules for maximum wheel width and tire size allowances.

More wheel width = better tire fit = often more grip. A 245 on a 9" wheel behaves differently than a 245 on a 7.5" wheel — the wider wheel gives a flatter contact patch and more lateral stiffness.

Coilovers move you from Street to ST

If you're running coilovers, you're no longer in Street class — you're in Street Touring. This is correct and expected. Street Touring exists specifically to give drivers a class for their modified-but-still-streetable cars. Don't try to run Street class with coilovers.

Notes on STS — The Small Tire Class

STS (Street Touring Sport) runs older, lighter cars and often requires smaller tire sizes — 205/50R15 is a common STS size on classic Miatas. The RE71RS is the dominant choice here because it's one of the few performance 200TW tires available in that size. RT660 availability in smaller sizes is improving but verify before purchasing.