| Pin % | Pin Weight |
|---|
Pin Weight and Why It Is Different
A fifth-wheel or gooseneck trailer connects over the rear axle and presses down into the truck bed through the kingpin. That download, called pin weight, runs higher than a bumper-pull tongue weight, typically 15 to 25 percent of the loaded trailer. Getting it into that band keeps the rig stable and the steering planted.
It Counts Against Payload
The catch that surprises many buyers is that pin weight sits in the bed and uses up the truck’s payload, the same allowance as passengers and cargo. A 3,000 pound pin on a truck with 3,000 pounds of payload leaves nothing for the driver, fuel, or gear. This is why heavy fifth-wheels often need a dually or a higher-series truck, not just more towing capacity.
Balancing the Load
Where you place cargo in the trailer shifts the pin weight. Loading heavy items ahead of the trailer axles raises pin weight; loading behind them lowers it and can cause dangerous sway. Aim for the middle of the recommended range and weigh the loaded rig to confirm, rather than guessing from the dry weight on the brochure.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is pin weight different from tongue weight?
Tongue weight is for bumper-pull trailers, about 10 to 15 percent. Pin weight is for fifth-wheel and gooseneck trailers, about 15 to 25 percent, and it loads the bed rather than the hitch.
Why does pin weight reduce my payload?
Because it bears down inside the truck bed, it is carried weight, so it subtracts from the same payload budget as people and cargo.
What if my pin weight is too high?
Move some cargo rearward of the trailer axles, but not so much that it goes below 15 percent, which invites sway. If it still exceeds payload, the truck is undersized for that trailer.
