Vehicle Fitment Guide
This guide explains how to confirm the right vehicle fit before ordering custom floor mats or trunk liners. If you are buying by make, model, year range, drive side, or material route, this page helps you organize the fitment details that matter before moving into enquiry, logo approval, or production.
Model-Specific Paths
Your site is already structured to let buyers search by make, model, year range, and drive side instead of browsing one mixed mat catalog. That makes fitment clarity a core part of the buying path.
Separate Material Choice
Material comparison belongs after fitment is clear. Your current site separates TPE, carpet, PVC, and hybrid paths so buyers can compare once they know the correct vehicle route.
Logo Projects Need Fitment First
Your site also separates logo MOQ and sample paths from standard fitment orders, which is the right approach when the same product family can have different approval steps.
Fitment Overview
Vehicle fitment is the foundation of any custom mat order. A floor mat can look similar in photos across different listings, but the actual floor shape can change depending on the make, model, year, trim, drive side, and interior layout. Your site already presents buyers with a fitment-first route, and that matches how aftermarket, dealer, and fleet buyers usually search.
The category is built around custom-fit car mats with waterproof, non-slip, logo-ready options across many supported vehicle models.

Why Fitment Matters
Even when two vehicles look close on paper, the floor pan, pedal area, rear hump, trunk shape, or seat rail spacing may be different. That is why fitment should always be confirmed before material upgrades, logo requests, or packaging changes are approved.
What Good Fitment Does
- Helps the mat sit flat around the floor edges
- Reduces movement in daily use
- Keeps pedal areas clear on driver-side mats
- Makes full-coverage and trunk pieces look cleaner
What Poor Fitment Causes
- Edges that lift or curl
- Gaps near the center tunnel or seat rails
- Driver-side interference risk near pedals
- Extra back-and-forth after delivery
What to Check Before Choosing a Set
A good fitment check starts with the simple details first. For most orders, the minimum useful information is make, model, model year, and drive side. For some vehicles, trim, generation, drivetrain, or body style also matters.
Key Fitment Details
Your site already encourages buyers to think in terms of fitment path first, then material and branding. This section helps explain which details should be confirmed before the order moves forward.:contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
| Fitment Detail | Why It Matters | What the Buyer Should Provide |
|---|---|---|
| Make / Model | Different vehicles use different floor shapes and coverage lines | Exact model name rather than a broad series only |
| Year Range | Interior layout can change across generations | Exact year or tightly defined year range |
| Drive Side | Driver mat shape changes between LHD and RHD | Clear left-hand drive or right-hand drive note |
| Trim / Version | Pedal area, floor hump, or seat rail details may differ | Trim, drivetrain, or variant if relevant |
| Coverage Type | Front only, full set, or trunk layouts require different pieces | Floor mats only or floor + trunk request |
| Project Type | Standard fitment and logo-ready builds may follow different review paths | Standard order, logo project, dealer, or fleet request |
Common Fitment Mistakes
Mistakes Buyers Often Make
- Using only the brand name and not the full model name
- Skipping the model year
- Forgetting to mention LHD or RHD
- Treating all trims as identical
- Requesting trunk coverage without confirming cargo layout
How to Avoid Them
- Copy the exact vehicle name from registration or manufacturer listing
- Use the full year rather than “recent model” wording
- State drive side clearly in the first enquiry
- Add trim or drivetrain when the platform has multiple floor layouts
- Send photos when the application is not straightforward
Before Ordering
Once fitment is confirmed, the buyer can move into material comparison, logo options, sample review, or quote discussion. That sequence mirrors how your site is already organized: fitment path first, then material and coverage notes, then logo MOQ or sample availability if needed.

Best Order of Review
- Confirm vehicle fitment
- Choose material family
- Choose standard or logo-ready build
- Check sample or MOQ conditions if needed
- Send the full enquiry with destination and quantity range
Useful Supporting Details
- Interior photos for unusual layouts
- Destination market for project planning
- Dealer or fleet note if the order is resale-focused
- Logo placement idea if branding is planned
- Need for trunk liner or full interior set
Quick Questions
Can I choose material before fitment?
- You can compare materials first, but final selection is safest after the correct vehicle application is confirmed.
Why does drive side matter?
- The driver-side piece changes shape around the pedal area, so LHD and RHD cannot be treated as interchangeable.
Do logo projects need extra fitment review?
- Usually yes. Standard and logo-ready builds often follow different approval steps and should not be mixed too early.
What if I am not sure about trim or generation?
- Send the exact vehicle details you have plus interior photos. That usually speeds up fitment checking.
Need help confirming your vehicle fitment?
Send your make, model, year, drive side, and any available trim notes before ordering. That makes it much easier to guide you to the right floor mat or trunk liner path.