By Ako Katka, AK Mobile Tyres • 2025-04-05 • 510-word guide
You may have seen garages offering nitrogen inflation for an extra fee. The claim is that nitrogen maintains pressure better and improves handling. But is it actually worth paying for? Here's an honest, straightforward comparison for everyday UK drivers.
Regular air is approximately 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and 1% other gases. When garages inflate with "nitrogen", they use 93–95% pure nitrogen by purging the tyre of air first.
The key difference: nitrogen molecules are larger than oxygen molecules, so nitrogen diffuses through the rubber sidewall more slowly. This means the tyre holds pressure longer.
Nitrogen makes real sense for:
For everyday commuter cars, the practical benefits are minimal — correctly inflated air tyres outperform neglected nitrogen-filled tyres. The discipline of monthly checks matters more than the gas inside.
Yes — if you need to top up and nitrogen isn't available, regular air is fine to use. You lose some of the nitrogen benefits but the tyre is safe. Just get it re-purged with nitrogen next time you're at a garage that offers it if you want to maintain the benefit.
No. All passenger tyres are designed for air inflation. Nitrogen is an optional upgrade, not a requirement.
We currently inflate all tyres to the correct manufacturer pressure using standard air. For most drivers on West London roads, this is perfectly adequate and indistinguishable in real-world performance.
In theory, more stable pressure could marginally improve fuel efficiency. But the effect is so small for road cars that you'd struggle to measure it in normal driving — and it only applies if your tyres would otherwise lose pressure faster.
AK Tyres covers Hayes, West London and surrounding areas 24/7. We come to you — home, work, or roadside.
📞 Call 07549 328819A simple step-by-step guide to checking tyre pressure correctly.
Read more →Is it worth spending more on premium tyres?
Read more →The legal minimum and how to check your tread depth.
Read more →