The Ultimate Guide
Brake Rotors
Brake Guide
Everything you need to know about choosing the right brake rotors for your Chrysler 300, Dodge Challenger, Dodge Charger, Dodge Magnum, Jeep Wrangler, Jeep Gladiator, Jeep Grand Cherokee, Dodge Durango, and Ram. Compare brands, rotor styles (slotted, drilled, blank), stopping power, pricing, and fitment across every generation.
How This Guide Works
Select your vehicle and generation below. Each guide provides a full comparison of every brake rotor we carry for that specific application — including slotted vs drilled vs blank, stopping power, noise, pricing, brand breakdowns, and important fitment notes you need to know before buying.
Chrysler 300
LX & LD Platform • 2005 – 2024
1st Generation • LX
2005 – 2010
2nd Generation • LD
2011 – 2014
2nd Gen Facelift • LD
2015 – 2024
Dodge Challenger
LC & LA Platform • 2008 – 2023
3rd Generation • LC
2008 – 2010
3rd Gen Refresh • LA
2011 – 2014
3rd Gen Facelift • LA
2015 – 2023
Dodge Charger
LX & LD Platform • 2006 – 2023
7th Generation • LX
2006 – 2010
7th Gen Refresh • LD
2011 – 2014
7th Gen Facelift • LD
2015 – 2023
Dodge Magnum
LX Platform • 2005 – 2008
Jeep Wrangler
TJ, JK & JL Platform • 1997 – 2026
TJ Generation
1997 – 2006
JK Generation • 2-Door & 4-Door
2007 – 2018
JL Generation • Sport, Rubicon, Sahara
2018 – 2026
Jeep Gladiator
JT Platform • 2018 – 2026
Jeep Grand Cherokee
ZJ, WJ, WK, WK2 & WL Platform • 1993 – 2026
ZJ Generation
1993 – 1998
WJ Generation
1999 – 2004
WK Generation • 6.1L SRT8
2005 – 2010
WK2 Generation • 3.6L, 5.7L, 392, Trackhawk
2011 – 2021
WL Generation
2022 – 2026
Dodge Durango
1998 – 2026
1st Generation
1998 – 2003
2nd Generation
2004 – 2009
3rd Generation • R/T, SRT, Citadel, GT
2011 – 2026
Ram
1500, 2500 & 3500 • 1994 – 2026
2nd Gen • 1500
1994 – 2001
3rd & 4th Gen • 1500
2002 – 2010
4th Gen • 1500
2011 – 2018
5th Gen DT • 1500
2019 – 2024
4th Gen HD • 2500
2011 – 2018
5th Gen HD • 2500
2019 – 2026
4th Gen HD • 3500
2011 – 2018
5th Gen HD • 3500
2019 – 2026
Before You Buy
What You Need to Know About Brake Rotors
Rotor Style: Slotted vs Drilled vs Blank
Slotted rotors resist heat better; drilled aid gas venting but can crack under track use; blank is quietest and most durable for daily driving. Choose based on your use case.
Coating & Corrosion
Coated rotors resist rust on hats and vanes. Important for daily drivers in wet or salt climates. The coating wears away in the pad swept area after the first few stops.
Front vs Rear
Many products are front-only or rear-only. Front rotors do most of the braking work. Match to your needs; replace in pairs (both front or both rear) for balanced performance.
Pad Compatibility
Rotors work with OE or aftermarket pads. Ensure pad compound matches your use — street pads for daily driving, track pads for performance. Bed in new rotors and pads together.
Trusted Brands
Brands Featured In Our Guides
Need Help Choosing?
Not sure which brake rotors are right for your vehicle? Our team knows these platforms inside and out. Reach out and we'll help you find the perfect fit.