Wiper blade size


Wiper blade size is measured in inches from tip to tip of the rubber element. The driver’s side and passenger’s side are almost always different lengths, and the rear wiper — if your vehicle has one — is a separate third size. Getting the length right is half the job; the attachment type also has to match your wiper arm.

Quick answer

Measure your existing blades, or look up your year/make/model/trim on any auto parts website. Driver’s side is typically 22–28 inches; passenger’s side 16–22 inches. The attachment type must also match — most modern arms use a J-hook, but pin, bayonet, top lock, and side pin connections all exist and are not interchangeable.

Specifications

Parameter Range / Options
Driver side (most vehicles) 22″ – 28″
Passenger side (most vehicles) 16″ – 22″
Rear wiper (hatchbacks / SUVs) 11″ – 16″
Most common arm attachment J-hook (standard hook)
Other attachment types Pin, bayonet, top lock, side pin, pinch tab
Blade types available Conventional frame, beam (bracketless), hybrid
Replacement interval Every 6–12 months, or when streaking begins

How to find your spec

  • Measure directly — lift the wiper arm off the glass. Measure from the tip of the rubber element to the other tip in inches. This works for any vehicle, any year, any market. Round to the nearest inch.
  • Auto parts lookup — AutoZone, O’Reilly, Advance Auto, and NAPA all have vehicle fitment guides online. Enter year/make/model and trim. Trim matters on some vehicles where different build levels use different arm sizes.
  • Owner’s manual appendix — some manufacturers include wiper sizes in the maintenance specifications section.
  • Check both sides separately — almost every vehicle uses different driver and passenger sizes. Do not assume they match.
  • Photograph the attachment point — before buying, photograph where the blade connects to the arm. Most quality blades ship with multiple adapters for the common hook sizes, but knowing which type you have prevents a wasted trip.

How to check

  1. Lift the wiper arm gently away from the windshield — most lock in the raised position. Hold firmly; an arm snapping onto a dry windshield can crack the glass.
  2. Locate the release tab where the blade meets the arm. Press it and slide or pivot the old blade free.
  3. Compare the new blade length to the old one before installing.
  4. Attach the new blade using the correct adapter — press until it clicks. Tug firmly to confirm it’s locked.
  5. Lower the arm gently. Run the wipers once before driving to confirm both blades seat evenly across the glass.

What goes wrong

  • Buying the same size for both sides — driver and passenger sizes are almost never the same. A blade that’s 4 inches too long won’t clear the edge of the glass; too short and you have a blind strip.
  • Wrong attachment adapter — most beam blades include adapters for J-hook, pin, and bayonet connections. Using the wrong one leaves the blade loose. At highway speed, a loose blade lifts off the glass entirely.
  • Ignoring the rear wiper — rear wipers wear at the same rate as fronts but get replaced far less often. Many drivers notice the rear only when it’s so degraded it scratches the glass.
  • Buying conventional frame blades for winter — conventional blades pack with ice in the frame channels, reducing contact with the glass. Beam blades have no frame and maintain full contact regardless of ice accumulation.
  • Cabin air filter size and type
  • Headlight bulb fitment
  • Tire pressure specifications

Sources

NHTSA FMVSS 104 — Windshield Wiping & Washing Systems
NHTSA — Driver Visibility & Vehicle Safety Systems

More Specs guides

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Ray Donovan Fleet Maintenance Specialist

Spent twelve years keeping sixty-two delivery trucks operational for a logistics company outside Chicago. Fleet maintenance at that scale is its own… Full bio →