A Tacoma lift kit done right is sized to your cargo, not just your tire goal. This collection gathers every lift we sell for the Tacoma — leveling kits through complete 2.5–4" systems from Dobinsons and ICON Vehicle Dynamics — filtered by generation so 1st Gen (1995–2004), 2nd Gen (2005–2015), 3rd Gen (2016–2023), and 4th Gen (2024+) owners each see exactly what bolts on. Tell us your bumper, tent, and drawer plans and we'll match spring rates before you order.
Toyota Tacoma Lift Kits FAQs
What's the best lift kit for a 3rd Gen Tacoma?
For overland use, a 2.5" Dobinsons or ICON system with springs rated for your actual gear weight is the community-standard answer — complete fitment, load options, and rebuildable dampers. "Best" truly depends on constant load: a stock-weight truck and a bumper-tent-drawers truck need different spring rates within the same kit family.
How long does a Tacoma lift install take?
A shop bills 4–6 hours for a complete kit; a capable home mechanic with a spring compressor should plan a full day. Rear leafs are straightforward; front coilover assembly is where the time (and the caution) goes. Add an alignment appointment the same week — non-negotiable for tire wear and tracking.
Will a 2.5" lift affect my Tacoma's towing or payload?
Payload and tow ratings don't legally change, but capability character does: load-rated springs actually improve how the truck carries tongue weight and cargo versus sagged factory springs. Watch driveline angles when towing heavy with taller lifts — another reason the 2.5" zone is the sweet spot for working trucks.
Do I need upper control arms (UCAs) with my Tacoma lift?
Above roughly 2.5" of front lift, aftermarket UCAs restore caster and ball-joint geometry — steering feel and alignment specs come back to factory-right. At 2" or below, stock arms usually align fine. Many complete kits offer UCA options; if you're at the 3" line, add them.
Spacer lift vs spring lift on a Tacoma — is the price difference worth it?
Spacers raise the truck but change nothing about spring rate or damping — fine for looks, wrong for loads. A real spring/shock system costs more because it's doing the actual work: carrying your gear without sag, controlling washboard, and surviving years of it. For an overland Tacoma, yes, it's worth it.






































