Nissan Titan Wiper Blade Sizes (2004-2024)

Few things are more frustrating than climbing into your Titan for an early morning haul only to discover your wipers can barely clear the morning dew, let alone heavy rain. When you depend on your truck for work or play, every component needs to pull its weight. Ineffective blades that skip and streak across your windshield create dangerous visibility gaps you can’t ignore.

The chart below helps you find the exact wiper blade sizes for your Titan’s specific year. We’ll also share which wiper brand Toyota truck owners trust to stand up to hard use and harsh conditions.

wiper blade

Nissan Titan Wiper Blade Size Chart

Note: The size guide below includes the Titan and Titan XD.

YearStyleDriverPassengerRecommended
2024Pickup24"21"Bosch ICON
2023Pickup24"21"Bosch ICON
2022Pickup24"21"Bosch ICON
2021Pickup24"20"Bosch ICON
2020Pickup24"21"Bosch ICON
2019Pickup24"21"Bosch ICON
2018Pickup24"21"Bosch ICON
2017Pickup24"21"Bosch ICON
2016Pickup24"21"Bosch ICON
2015Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2014Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2013Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2012Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2011Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2010Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2009Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2008Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2007Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2006Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2005Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON
2004Pickup24"22"Bosch ICON

About the Nissan Titan

The Nissan Titan entered the highly competitive full-size pickup truck market in 2004, bringing Japanese engineering and build quality to a segment dominated by American brands. The first generation (2004-2015) aimed to challenge the Ford F-150, Chevrolet Silverado, GMC Sierra, and Dodge Ram with a powerful 5.6-liter Endurance V8 engine producing 305 horsepower.

Nissan offered the Titan in various cab configurations and bed lengths, competing directly against Toyota’s Tundra for a share of the lucrative truck market.

The first-generation Titan featured a fully boxed frame and available off-road packages, though it never achieved the sales success of its Detroit rivals. Despite respectable towing capacity and payload ratings, the Titan struggled to match the broad range of engine options and trim levels offered by competitors. Sales remained modest compared to the segment leaders.

Nissan completely redesigned the Titan for its second generation in 2016, which launched for the 2017 model year. The new truck received fresh styling, an upgraded interior, and improved technology. The 5.6-liter Endurance V8 was retuned to produce 390 horsepower and 394 lb-ft of torque, paired with a seven-speed automatic transmission (later upgraded to a nine-speed in 2020).

Nissan also introduced the Titan XD, a heavy-duty variant positioned between light-duty and traditional heavy-duty trucks, initially offering a Cummins 5.0-liter turbo-diesel V8 (discontinued after 2019).

The second-generation Titan (2017-2024) competed against the Ford F-150, Chevrolet Silverado 1500, Ram 1500, Toyota Tundra, and GMC Sierra 1500. The lineup eventually focused solely on the standard-duty model after Nissan discontinued the diesel and XD variants. Available features included a 9-inch touchscreen, Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and Nissan’s Safety Shield 360 suite with automatic emergency braking, blind-spot monitoring, and rear cross-traffic alert.

The Titan was offered in King Cab and Crew Cab configurations with rear-wheel or four-wheel drive. Towing capacity reached up to 9,310 pounds when properly equipped. Nissan officially discontinued the Titan after the 2024 model year, ending its two-decade production run at the Canton, Mississippi plant.

See Also:  Nissan Frontier wiper lengths, Nissan Armada wiper lengths, Nissan Pathfinder wiper lengths