9 of Our Favorite Modern Wheel Designs

Saab

Wheels are like shoes. A good set can make everything else in the ensemble pop, but ugly ones can flush loads of effort elsewhere right down the toilet. Enthusiasts love to make their cars look just so, and because wheels are so interchangeable, they’ve been among the most popular vehicle modifications for decades.

In the modern era, there are a lot of boring wheel designs, a lot of polarizing wheel designs, and then some that make you feel absolutely nothing. But occasionally, designers get the stock wheels so right that there’s no need to look to the aftermarket. Our team got to discussing what OEM (original equipment manufacturer) wheels nail the brief.

We’re not big rules people here, but we did all agree to set a time frame of 2000 to now. We covered some of the more classic designs like Minilites and Fuchs here—that conversation was all about the best wheels to come out in the last quarter century. Below are nine nominations from our staff for the best modern wheel designs. Who got it right? What’d we leave out? Who needs a wellness check based on what they offered up? Let us know in the comments.

Cadillac V-Series 10-Spoke Wheel

Cameron Neveu

First introduced on the previous-generation Cadillac performance sedans, the CTS-V and the ATS-V, this 10-spoke design is fantastic. (The updated version looks nearly as good on the new CT4-V Blackwing, too.) But as cool as they are on a road car, they’re even better on Cadillac’s older, DPi-V.R IMSA race cars. A nice little brand parallel between the road and race cars lends even more credibility to just how gnarly these cars are when you thrash them. These got the vote of managing editor Eddy Eckart, and it’s not hard to see why.

Saab 9-5 Turbo 3-Spoke Wheels

Saab 9-5 Turbo Sedan Three Spoke Wheels
Saab

Our executive editor Eric Weiner chimed in with a nod for these Saab wheels. While the now-defunct automaker had a thing for unconventional rollers, this design takes the cake. Although Saab no longer makes cars, we’ll always have an affinity for the company that took much of its design ethos from its “Born from Jets” tagline.

Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren Fan Blades

Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren rear three-quarter
James Lipman

Remember how bad wheels can sully a car’s good design? Well, sometimes the opposite is true. Great wheels can lift an otherwise, erm, interesting design. That was just the case for those nominated by editor-at-large Stefan Lombard.

“I love the smoked 15-inch Desert Runner wheels fitted to certain early 2000s Nissan Frontiers (I put a set on my Xterra) but I think I’ve got to go with the fan blades on the 2004–10 Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren. Ironically, they are the best-looking part of the whole car.”

Cadillac Tech Bronze Snowflakes

2023 Cadillac CT5-V high angle front quarter panel
Cameron Neveu

I mean, it’s a fact that no good wheels were designed after the ’70s, but if I had to choose a modern wheel … I’ve got a thing for the wheels they’re slapping on these performance Cadillacs. (That sound you’re hearing is two of our racing experts—Cam and Eddy—in violent agreement.) The brushed satin gold/bronze tone on these things is just fantastic, and I love the amount of sidewall you still get with these wheels. — Cameron Neveu

Chevrolet Silverado HD Alcoa Aluminum Wheels

Trucks don’t usually get highly stylized wheels. It’s always function first, then form. But as resident DIY guru Kyle Smith points out, sometimes the two marry up nicely. And of course, being the wrench-master that he is, he has personal experience with these things.

“The Alcoa aluminum wheels that Chevrolet specced on the heavy-duty lineup from 2000 to 2010 have aged gracefully and are one of the rare affordable options for those looking to add some flair to their eight-lug trucks without resorting to chrome 20-inchers or painted steelies,” he says. “After finding a set locally, I had them blasted and powder-coated for a great OEM+ look. They actually helped the handling of my big red Express since the aluminum wheels are so much lighter than the factory steel ones. The ride is a lot better, which might be a low bar with an ex-plumber van, but better ride and better look? That’s about as good as it gets.”

Land Rover Defender and Ford Maverick’s Modern Steelies

Modern adaptations of vintage ideas don’t always work, but when they do, they’re pretty special. Senior editor Grace Houghton laid out a compelling case for a wheel design that we’d otherwise overlook entirely.

“I’m a huge fan of steel wheels, whether OEM or aftermarket,” said Houghton. “This pretty white one is from the Land Rover Defender, a luxury-minded off-roader, but you’ll also find them on new vehicles as humble as the Ford Maverick. Burly yet handsome, and so functional … and don’t get me started on the powder-coated steel beauties made by Detroit Steel Wheel Company … no street-rod truck would be complete without a set.”

Tesla Cybertruck Wheel Cover

Tesla Cybertruck store display wheel tire
Deborah L Smith

We were all scratching our heads when senior editor Sajeev Mehta nominated the shoes on the Cybertruck. However, in true Sajeev fashion, he took the idea of “favorite” and pivoted it to mean “favorite wheel design to laugh at.” Score one for loose rules! Here’s his explanation: “The Cybertruck wheel covers prove that you can try to ‘Silicon Valley’ your way into reinventing the wheel, but you’re just gonna embarrass yourself in the process with a design that goes past the rim and eats into the tire.”

Alphard Wheels from Mid-2000s Mercedes-Benz SL600

Mercedes-Benz SL 230 Alphard Wheels
ebay/individualclassics

Associate editor Chris Stark decided to bend the rules a different way, celebrating a wheel design not for how it looked on the car that wore it originally, but for how the design would look on other cars. It’s Friday, so we’ll allow it.

“I’m partial to the optional Alphard wheels that were available on the mid-2000s Mercedes SL,” he said. “They look fine on the cars they came on, but like the Corvette Sawblade wheels, they look way better on slammed VWs.”

Morgan Super 3 Disc Wheels

Morgan 3 passenger front three quarter low
Brandan Gillogly

Who doesn’t love a good set of discs? They’re similar in design to the aeroblade wheels of IMSA fame, but with a smidge of functionality pulled out in favor of a little more curb appeal. Our resident U.K. correspondent, Nik Berg, had this to say about the shoes on this very British Morgan Super 3:

“They’re very big. On a very small car. Look almost like military hardware on this otherwise quite dainty oddball.”

No notes. Hard to argue with that.

Surely, there are plenty of modern wheel designs that we overlooked. Do you have a few in mind? Sound off in the comments below!

***

Check out the Hagerty Media homepage so you don’t miss a single story, or better yet, bookmark it. To get our best stories delivered right to your inbox, subscribe to our newsletters.

Click below for more about
Read next Up next: 1971 Cadillac Calais: A Series 62 by Any Other Name…
Your daily pit stop for automotive news.

Sign up to receive our Daily Driver newsletter

Subject to Hagerty's Privacy Policy and Terms of Conditions

Thanks for signing up.

Comments

    I almost forgot!
    Gotti modular wheels
    I put a set on a 240z I restored.
    They looked magnificent. And nobody else had them!

    Ugly? Beautiful? Only two things that count are how much do they weigh and are they strong?

    5 Spoke are the best bet. Ferrari set the mould that many others followed. That’s all we need. None of those grotesque “modern” designs that are only different for the sake of being different.

    Can’t go wrong with nice silver steel rims with trim ring and center cap on some cars. Looks great on first generation Miata. Also on any pre-malaise-era muscle car.

    I am a fan of plain steel wheels. The Tesla Cyber truck wheels are ghastly as is the entire vehicle.

    Here! Here! Nothing better! Yeah I know I’m in the past but when you used to see them on everything from s/s racing to the cars in high school you just know they were right!

    For modern wheels, I really like the pattern that was standard on the Jeep JL Rubicons, I had a Sahara with 5-spokes which looked just fine but I coveted those rubicon wheels. For steelies, I love the mopar 6-slot police rims paired with the 3 point star/red ring dog dish hubcaps that I put on my 78 Ramcharger. But I think my overall favorite wheels are Cragar SS, and the 21” Ford Model A wheels with the small center cap.

    Forged by Alcoa, the 18×8 polished aluminum Mercury Marauder (2003/2004) wheels were so good looking that they made them an accessory option for Mustangs.

    Halibrand knock-off wheels were one of my favorite wheels and I used them on many of my cars. I had Cragar SS on my 64 GTO, which I ordered new in 1963 with the optional $125 421 “Royal” motor. I won the Cragar’s at the Pomona Winter Nationationals. In later years I bought a Dodge Mirada, had it louvered and painted by Barris, lowered it 6″, put Barani wire wheels with 10″ wide chrome rims and super wide tires with tubbed wheel wells and I drove that beast for fourteen years before donating it to the Polly Klass foundation. Wheels make the motoring.

    Subaru STi BBS. Gen One STi BBS wheels are iconic, but I’d argue that the 18″ BBS design (on the Launch Edition, Hyper.Blue, and Limited (trim level) from 2015-2017 were the best design.

    A few people have mentioned the C5 ZO6 wheels. They’re nice looking wheels but IMO the more common polished “thin spokes” have the edge. I realize the ZO6 wheels are an inch wider front and rear so they’ll have a “meatier” look with better track performance, but overall I prefer the clean simplicity of a 5-spoke wheel. On almost any car.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *