Bearing mounting fits are specified in thousandths of an inch or hundredths of a millimeter. These tiny dimensions control whether the bearing inner ring grips the shaft properly, whether the outer ring stays put in the housing, and whether the internal clearance is correct for the operating temperature. Get the fit wrong by a few tenths of a thousandth and you create problems that may not show up for months.
This guide covers why fits matter, how to choose the right tolerance class, what goes wrong when the fit is too loose or too tight, and how thermal growth changes the fit at operating temperature.
Why the Inner Ring Must Grip the Shaft
The bearing inner ring must rotate with the shaft as a single unit. If there is any clearance between the inner ring bore and the shaft surface, the ring slips slightly with each revolution. This is called creep, and it is destructive.
Creep generates fretting corrosion at the contact surface. You see it as a fine reddish-brown powder when you remove the bearing. The shaft surface and the inner ring bore both wear, enlarging the clearance and accelerating the creep. Eventually, the bearing runs eccentric, vibration increases, and the bearing fails. The shaft is damaged and needs repair or replacement.
The solution is an interference fit: the shaft diameter is slightly larger than the bearing bore. The bearing is pressed or heated onto the shaft, and the elastic deformation of the ring creates a grip that prevents creep. The amount of interference depends on the load, the bearing size, and the operating conditions.
Light load, easy assembly needed → j5
Normal rotating inner ring load → k5 (ball) or m6 (roller)
Heavy or shock loads → m6 to n6 (ball) or n6 to p6 (roller)
Point load on inner ring (non-rotating) → g6 to h6 (clearance fit is acceptable)
Press Fit / Clearance Checker
Verify shaft-to-bore fit against ISO/ANSI tolerance classes. Enter measured shaft and bore diameters to check interference, clearance, and assembly method recommendations.
What Happens When the Fit Is Too Tight
An overly tight interference fit squeezes the inner ring, reducing the bearing internal clearance. In extreme cases, the clearance goes to zero or even becomes negative, meaning the rolling elements are preloaded against both raceways. This increases friction, generates heat, and dramatically shortens bearing life.
A standard-clearance (CN) bearing has about 0.005 to 0.015mm of internal clearance depending on the size. A tight shaft fit can consume 60 to 80 percent of that clearance by expanding the inner ring. Add thermal growth from operating temperature, and the clearance can go to zero even if it was marginal at assembly.
The fix is to match the shaft fit to the bearing clearance class. If the application requires a tight shaft fit (m6, n6, or p6), use a bearing with C3 internal clearance, which has more clearance to compensate. For very tight fits or high-temperature applications, C4 clearance may be needed.
How to Measure Fits Correctly
You need a micrometer, not calipers. The difference between a good fit and a bad fit is measured in tenths of a thousandth of an inch (0.0001"). Digital calipers are accurate to about 0.001" on a good day. That is not good enough.
Measure the shaft diameter in at least two places 90 degrees apart at the bearing seat location. Take measurements at both ends of the seat if the bearing is more than 20mm wide. Check for taper (diameter different at each end) and out-of-round (diameter different at 0 and 90 degrees). Both conditions cause the bearing ring to seat unevenly, concentrating stress.
Measure the bearing bore with the same micrometer. New bearings have minimal bore variation, but if you are reusing a bearing (not recommended but sometimes done), check the bore for wear. Compare the shaft diameter to the bearing bore diameter. The difference is your actual fit.
• Let the micrometer and parts equalize to room temperature
• Clean both surfaces thoroughly before measuring
• Record all measurements on the work order
• If the shaft is out of round by more than 0.0003", it needs repair
• If the shaft is tapered by more than 0.0002" across the seat width, it needs grinding
Press Fit / Clearance Checker
Verify shaft-to-bore fit against ISO/ANSI tolerance classes. Enter measured shaft and bore diameters to check interference, clearance, and assembly method recommendations.
How Temperature Changes the Fit
A steel shaft and a steel bearing ring have the same coefficient of thermal expansion, so if they heat up together, the fit does not change. But in most machines, the shaft runs hotter than the housing. The inner ring and shaft heat up first and expand together. The outer ring stays closer to ambient temperature, especially if the housing has cooling fins or is mounted to a large steel frame.
The differential thermal growth tightens the inner ring fit and loosens the outer ring fit. A shaft that goes from 20°C ambient to 80°C operating temperature grows about 0.035mm for a 50mm diameter. That additional growth adds to the interference fit, further reducing internal clearance.
Aluminum housings make this worse. Aluminum expands at about twice the rate of steel. A bearing outer ring in an aluminum housing loosens as temperature increases because the aluminum bore grows faster than the steel ring. A housing fit that is correct at room temperature can have clearance at operating temperature, allowing the outer ring to creep.
Thermal Growth Fit Impact Calculator
Calculate thermal expansion of shafts and housings and see the impact on bearing fit. Enter material, dimensions, and temperature change to see dimensional growth and resulting hot-running fit.