2016 Toyota Tundra Towing Capacity by Trim & Engine
- The 2016 Tundra's max tow rating is 10,500 lbs — 5.7L V8, 4x2, with the factory tow package and 4.30 axle ratio required
- The base 4.6L V8 caps at 6,800 lbs (4x2) and 6,400 lbs (4x4) — fine for smaller boats and utility trailers, not travel trailers
- Payload ranges from 1,440 to 2,080 lbs; always check your door-jamb sticker before loading, not just the tow rating
- The factory tow package is required for published max ratings — without it, Toyota doesn't certify those numbers
- 4x4 drivetrains reduce towing capacity by 100–400 lbs across both engine options due to added curb weight
Published: 2026-03-02 · Updated: 2026-03-02
What Is the 2016 Tundra Towing Capacity?
The 2016 Toyota Tundra towing capacity ranges from 6,400 lbs to 10,500 lbs, depending on engine, drivetrain, cab configuration, and whether the factory tow package is installed. The 5.7L i-FORCE V8 with a 4x2 drivetrain and 4.30 rear axle ratio hits the peak 10,500-lb rating. Every other configuration lands somewhere below that ceiling.
The 2016 Tundra sits in the same generation as the 2015 and 2017 Tundra — Toyota's second-gen body-on-frame platform introduced in 2014. That generation carried a double-channel boxed frame and revised suspension geometry that gave it a meaningful advantage in tow stability over the first-gen model. The 2016 model year itself had no major mechanical changes from 2015, but it introduced updated infotainment and minor interior upgrades across trims.
Use the towing capacity lookup tool below to confirm specs for your exact VIN and configuration before you hitch up.
Enter your truck's details to pull tow ratings specific to your build:
How Much Can a 2016 Tundra With the 5.7L V8 Tow?
The 2016 Tundra 5.7L V8 towing capacity ranges from 9,800 to 10,500 lbs depending on cab style, bed length, and drivetrain. The 5.7L i-FORCE V8 produces 381 horsepower and 401 lb-ft of torque paired with a 6-speed automatic transmission (AB60F). For maximum towing, the 4.30 rear axle ratio is the configuration to choose — it's what gets you to that 10,500-lb ceiling.
The Regular Cab and Double Cab 4x2 models with the short bed and 4.30 axle ratio hit the peak. CrewMax models rate slightly lower — typically 10,100 to 10,200 lbs — because the longer wheelbase and heavier cab add curb weight. The 4x4 variants with the 5.7L drop to 10,100–10,400 lbs depending on configuration.
One thing worth knowing: the 5.7L in the 2016 Tundra uses a dual independent Variable Valve Timing with intelligence (VVT-i) system on both intake and exhaust camshafts — a setup Toyota calls Dual VVT-i. It's the same core engine found in the Sequoia and Land Cruiser, and Toyota has a strong track record of reliability with it under sustained tow loads. According to Toyota's published towing supplements, this engine's broad torque curve (peak torque available from 3,400 rpm) is a key reason the Tundra handles grades better than some competitors with similar displacement.
For a full look at how the 5.7L performs across model years, see our complete Toyota Tundra towing capacity guide.
What Is the Towing Capacity of the 2016 Tundra 4.6L V8?
The 2016 Tundra 4.6L V8 towing capacity tops out at 6,800 lbs in 4x2 form and 6,400 lbs with 4x4. This base engine — the 1UR-FE — produces 310 horsepower and 327 lb-ft of torque and pairs with the same 6-speed automatic as the 5.7L. The 4.6L uses a 3.91 rear axle ratio, which is part of why its tow ceiling is lower.
The 4.6L is available only on the SR and SR5 trims. If you're towing a mid-size aluminum fishing boat around 3,500 lbs, a cargo trailer under 6,000 lbs, or a small camper in the 5,000-lb range, this engine handles it without strain. But if you're eyeing a bumper-pull travel trailer in the 7,000–9,000-lb range, you'll want to step up to the 5.7L.
Be aware that the 4.6L's tow package availability differs slightly — some 4.6L SR configurations don't include the supplemental transmission cooler as standard equipment, which matters if you're consistently near the 6,800-lb ceiling on hilly routes.
Does the 2016 Tundra Towing Capacity Change by Trim Level?
Yes, the 2016 Tundra towing capacity changes by trim — but not because Toyota engineered separate ratings for each badge. It shifts because trim level dictates which engine and equipment come standard, and higher luxury trims carry more curb weight. The SR and SR5 offer both the 4.6L and 5.7L V8. The Limited, Platinum, TRD Pro, and 1794 Edition all come standard with the 5.7L, but their higher curb weights trim the towing ceiling by 100–400 lbs compared to a base 5.7L Regular Cab.
Here's the full breakdown by engine and drivetrain:
| Configuration | Engine | Drivetrain | Max Tow Rating | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regular Cab / Double Cab | 5.7L V8 | 4x2 | 10,500 lbs | Toyota Towing Guide |
| Double Cab / CrewMax | 5.7L V8 | 4x4 | 10,100–10,400 lbs | Toyota Towing Guide |
| CrewMax | 5.7L V8 | 4x2 | 10,200 lbs | Toyota Towing Guide |
| Regular Cab / Double Cab | 4.6L V8 | 4x2 | 6,800 lbs | Toyota Towing Guide |
| Double Cab / CrewMax | 4.6L V8 | 4x4 | 6,400 lbs | Toyota Towing Guide |
Source: Toyota 2016 Tundra Trailer Towing Guide, published by Toyota Motor North America.
The TRD Pro deserves a special note: it's 4x4 only, which places it in the 10,100–10,400-lb range with the 5.7L despite being a performance-oriented trim. If you're buying a TRD Pro to tow, it'll do the job — just don't expect the absolute peak number. You can compare this against similar-era trucks in our half-ton truck towing capacity roundup.
What Tow Package Came on the 2016 Toyota Tundra?
The 2016 Tundra tow package includes a Class IV tow hitch receiver (rated to 10,500 lbs GTW), a 4-pin and 7-pin wiring harness, a supplemental engine oil cooler, a transmission oil cooler, Trailer-Sway Control (TSC) integration, and a 130-amp alternator. On 5.7L-equipped trims, this package is standard. On the base 4.6L SR, it's an add-on.
According to NHTSA, Trailer-Sway Control operates through the VSC (Vehicle Stability Control) system by selectively applying brakes and reducing throttle when the system detects trailer oscillation. It's not a substitute for a properly loaded trailer — tongue weight, trailer brake controllers, and sway-control hitches still matter — but it's a meaningful safety net.
The Class IV receiver on the 2016 Tundra is stamped on the receiver tube itself. Look for "Class IV" or "GTW 10,500" near the pin hole. If you're buying used and can't verify the tow package was dealer-installed rather than aftermarket, cross-check the build sheet using the vehicle's VIN through Toyota's customer service line or a service like Edmunds.
Without the factory tow package, Toyota explicitly does not certify the published maximum tow ratings. An aftermarket hitch may bolt on, but you lose the cooler, the wiring integration, and the TSC activation — and you're operating outside the tested configuration.
What Is the Payload Capacity of a 2016 Toyota Tundra?
The 2016 Tundra payload capacity ranges from 1,440 to 2,080 lbs depending on cab style, bed length, engine, and drivetrain. Regular Cab models with the 6.5-ft bed and 5.7L 4x2 offer the highest payload. CrewMax models with the 5.5-ft bed and 5.7L 4x4 sit at the lower end of that range.
Payload and towing capacity are connected in a way that surprises a lot of owners. Your payload isn't just for cargo in the bed — it includes passengers, fuel, and tongue weight from the trailer. According to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, tongue weight should be 10–15% of gross trailer weight for stable towing.
Here's a worked example with real numbers:
You're towing an 8,500-lb bumper-pull travel trailer with your 5.7L CrewMax. At 12% tongue weight, that's 1,020 lbs on the hitch. Add yourself (195 lbs), a passenger (165 lbs), and 60 lbs of gear in the cab. That's 1,440 lbs of payload consumed — right at the lower end of CrewMax payload rating, with zero room left for anything in the bed. A full tank of fuel (26-gallon tank × ~6 lbs/gallon = 156 lbs) pushes you over. That's a real constraint you need to plan around.
Always find your specific payload rating on the driver's-side B-pillar door-jamb sticker — it says "Combined Weight of Occupants and Cargo Should Not Exceed XXX lbs." That number is calculated for your exact truck, not the average of the lineup. For a deeper look at how payload and towing interact, read our towing capacity vs. payload explainer.
Can a 2016 Toyota Tundra Tow a Travel Trailer or Fifth Wheel?
A 2016 Tundra with the 5.7L V8 can tow most mid-size bumper-pull travel trailers — dry weights in the 6,000–8,500-lb range are realistic targets, keeping loaded trailer weight under the 10,500-lb ceiling. For fifth wheels and gooseneck trailers, it's a different story.
Most entry-level fifth wheels start around 12,000–14,000 lbs loaded. The 2016 Tundra's 10,500-lb ceiling makes it incompatible with those loads. Beyond the tow rating, fifth-wheel towing requires a kingpin-to-axle clearance and a payload large enough to absorb pin weight (typically 18–22% of gross trailer weight). Even if you found a fifth wheel at 10,000 lbs loaded, the pin weight alone — around 1,800–2,200 lbs — would blow past the Tundra's payload rating before you load the cab.
If your fifth wheel is the goal, you need to look at three-quarter-ton trucks minimum. For a side-by-side comparison of what those alternatives bring, see our towing capacity guide or check the RAM 1500 towing capacity and Silverado towing capacity pages to benchmark the competition.
For bumper-pull travel trailers, keep loaded weight below 8,500 lbs to maintain margin for passengers and cargo. Run the payload math before every trip — not just once when you buy the trailer. Seasonal gear, water tanks, and full propane cylinders add up fast. If you want to know whether your exact trailer and load work with your 2016 Tundra, our Can My Truck Tow This? calculator runs through the full numbers.
One more condition to factor in: altitude. At 6,000 feet in the Rockies or Sierra Nevada, a naturally aspirated V8 loses roughly 3% of its power output per 1,000 feet above sea level. The 5.7L's 10,500-lb rating was tested at sea level. At 7,000 feet, you're effectively towing with about 15–18% less available power — not a dealbreaker, but something to respect on long grades with an 8,500-lb trailer behind you. Drop your cruising speed and use Tow/Haul mode, which holds lower gears longer and manages downshift timing on descents.