Sponsored

2.5” lift input

Wheelin98TJ

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ryan
Joined
Jul 27, 2021
Threads
11
Messages
3,710
Reaction score
4,371
Location
Devils Lake, MI
Vehicle(s)
2021 Jeep Gladiator
Occupation
Bean Counter
Most 2.5" lift kits I've seen do not include a requirement for a track bar. My personal experience installing a new Mopar lift kit, which netted about a 3" lift, is that we didn't need a new track bar to keep things straight. That kit included front LCAs, spring saddles, shocks and springs.

I do suggest adding a new heavier duty steering damper, especially considering your miles and your plans for taller tires. On my build, replacing the damper with a Fox IFP stabilizer made a noticable difference both on and off road.

Also, get a four wheel alignment after doing the lift. There are limited adjustments to make (toe, wheel centering, etc), but you'll know if you're tracking straight and how much your LCAs improved castor.
The lowest base level 2.5” kit that Clayton offers includes front and rear track bars.
Sponsored

 

Bjeepz

Well-Known Member
First Name
B
Joined
Nov 21, 2019
Threads
10
Messages
1,009
Reaction score
1,061
Location
Canada
Vehicle(s)
2025 Willy's
Do you disco your sway bar in the front? I only ask because I recently bought there fully adjustable arms set to pair with 2 inch coils all around and reached out to them about the front drive shaft. They said they don’t think it would be necessary. I never disco the front amd am curious if that’s why they didn’t think it would be necessary.
The requirement for a new front driveshaft is related to the front shock extended length. The exact numbers are somewhere, I think it is anything more than 28.5 inches extended.

When not disconnecting you won't fully extend travel like the photo above as the sway bar prevents that, but if you're jumping your Jeep both sides will fully extend.
 
Last edited:
OP
OP

Flyinarmbar

Member
First Name
Dan
Joined
Nov 3, 2019
Threads
4
Messages
14
Reaction score
3
Location
Long Island,NY
Vehicle(s)
2020 Jeep Gladiator
I would look at the lower spring perch, they tend to be crushed at 50k+ miles, so with yours double that, they're toast. Clayton, Metalcloak, Teraflex sell them. A regear for 37's, optional for 35's but you'll feel a little sluggish off the line.

PXL_20250610_135657505.webp


PXL_20250609_220621649.webp
Thanks for the heads up.
 
OP
OP

Flyinarmbar

Member
First Name
Dan
Joined
Nov 3, 2019
Threads
4
Messages
14
Reaction score
3
Location
Long Island,NY
Vehicle(s)
2020 Jeep Gladiator
Something to consider before getting the kit is to find out the lift-kit manufacturer recommends a front drive shaft replacement (upgrade). I have the Metal Cloak 2.5 GC lift. In the instructions, they HIGLY recommend dropping another 700 bones for a smaller diameter, strong front drive shaft. After installing the lift, I quickly realized, this should not have been recommendation, but a requirement. The MC2.5GC lift flexes soo much, the MC drive shaft actually scrapes on the exhaust. The stock drive shaft would certainly bind-up if flexed that much. I would assume Clayton, or other full suspension lift kits would recommend replacing the front drive shaft as well.
Thanks. I’ll def check that out
 

Sponsored

OP
OP

Flyinarmbar

Member
First Name
Dan
Joined
Nov 3, 2019
Threads
4
Messages
14
Reaction score
3
Location
Long Island,NY
Vehicle(s)
2020 Jeep Gladiator
Most 2.5" lift kits I've seen do not include a requirement for a track bar. My personal experience installing a new Mopar lift kit, which netted about a 3" lift, is that we didn't need a new track bar to keep things straight. That kit included front LCAs, spring saddles, shocks and springs.

I do suggest adding a new heavier duty steering damper, especially considering your miles and your plans for taller tires. On my build, replacing the damper with a Fox IFP stabilizer made a noticable difference both on and off road.

Also, get a four wheel alignment after doing the lift. There are limited adjustments to make (toe, wheel centering, etc), but you'll know if you're tracking straight and how much your LCAs improved castor.
Thank you
 
OP
OP

Flyinarmbar

Member
First Name
Dan
Joined
Nov 3, 2019
Threads
4
Messages
14
Reaction score
3
Location
Long Island,NY
Vehicle(s)
2020 Jeep Gladiator
Do you disco your sway bar in the front? I only ask because I recently bought there fully adjustable arms set to pair with 2 inch coils all around and reached out to them about the front drive shaft. They said they don’t think it would be necessary. I never disco the front amd am curious if that’s why they didn’t think it would be necessary.
No I’ve never disconnected
 

Bandit’s Lair

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jason
Joined
Jul 9, 2025
Threads
31
Messages
2,573
Reaction score
4,234
Location
Southern California
Vehicle(s)
2021 Gladiator Sport S
Occupation
Retired
No upper arms
Whoever had mine previously did the Mopar kit with just the MC lowers and stock uppers. I’ll eventually rip it all out and do something way better. Right now it rides like mierde. It’s drivable but I know it can be way better. If it’s driving take your time and do some really thorough research about all the components. Make sure they’ll do exactly what you’re going to ask of the Gladiator. It’s a pricey upgrade so getting it wrong can hurt.
 

Sponsored

Brucewillys

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rick
Joined
Aug 29, 2021
Threads
4
Messages
104
Reaction score
77
Location
Hancock NH
Vehicle(s)
2021 jeep gladiator willys
Occupation
Merchandising
Hello all, I’m thinking of purchasing 2.5” Clayton lift for my 2020 sport S off of mkt place. I have about 120,000 miles and was planning on replacing shocks n springs anyway and leveling. The Kit has about 2k miles. Guy went with taller lift. kit comes with springs, billstein 5100 shocks, and lower control arms. I have max tow and Dana 44 pkg. what else would I need to install this kit. Prob going with 35 or 37” tires. Do I need to regear? It’s my daily driver and I travel about 200 miles upstate about once a month or so. I’d like to keep ride quality close or the same. Thanks for any input
I'm running a AEV 2" spacer lift with those billsteins on 37"x12.5 r17. I'd say try it then go regear if you miss the acceleration. I definitely needed my superchips flashcal+ to recalibrate the speedo because the shift points were trash with the 37's. I will say the billsteins were quite an improvement over my stock shocks. Much more planted and less like a yacht.
Pics because why not

Jeep Gladiator 2.5” lift input PXL_20260304_163643691


Jeep Gladiator 2.5” lift input PXL_20260225_174138184.MP


Jeep Gladiator 2.5” lift input PXL_20260304_163703256.MP
 

LouieL19

New Member
First Name
Louie
Joined
Nov 25, 2025
Threads
0
Messages
2
Reaction score
7
Location
Philadelphia
Vehicle(s)
2020 Jeep Gladiator Sport S
Occupation
Steamfitter
I had installed a Clayton 2.5” ride right with Fox 2.0 shocks and 37’s on my 2020 sport s w/o max tow back in December 2025. I still have my 3.73’s in and it’s a lot slower now but still drivable. Definitely going to do a regear but I would feel it out first unless you have the money to spend. I do think I need a good steering stabilizer tho.
 

Bjeepz

Well-Known Member
First Name
B
Joined
Nov 21, 2019
Threads
10
Messages
1,009
Reaction score
1,061
Location
Canada
Vehicle(s)
2025 Willy's
I had installed a Clayton 2.5” ride right with Fox 2.0 shocks and 37’s on my 2020 sport s w/o max tow back in December 2025. I still have my 3.73’s in and it’s a lot slower now but still drivable. Definitely going to do a regear but I would feel it out first unless you have the money to spend. I do think I need a good steering stabilizer tho.
I have been using Falcon pass through stabilizers on my Gladiators and JLU's and notice a positive improvement in steering feel with 37's and 35's.

My 1st Gladiator was a 2020 Overland with 3.73's and it had 285/75r17's = 34x11.5 and I found it great as I had a tacoma before that on 33.5's. My last Mojave had 37's on 4.10's and I found it perfectly fine. I don't feel like my current WIll'ys XR with 4.56 and 35's has any real noticeable difference in acceleration but it does shift better and holds higher gears better. As for MPG's it is so close I can't really say, this summer long road trips may prove there is a real difference but in winter up here it is impossible to tell.
 

UTRocky

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rocky
Joined
Jan 15, 2025
Threads
16
Messages
141
Reaction score
97
Location
Toledo, OH
Vehicle(s)
'23 Jeep Gladiator JT - Willy
I want to get the 3.5" from Clayton - I am in a Willys so Dana 44s 3.73 axle - my end is 35/36" tires. Besides upgrading brake lines, anything else need to be done to ensure vehicle lasts 40 years? I keep being told repair shop social media videos that lifting a vehicle is fine but it ruins life of the vehicle.

Do I need to do shocks and drive shafts, shocks bilsteins the best?
 

Bandit’s Lair

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jason
Joined
Jul 9, 2025
Threads
31
Messages
2,573
Reaction score
4,234
Location
Southern California
Vehicle(s)
2021 Gladiator Sport S
Occupation
Retired
I want to get the 3.5" from Clayton - I am in a Willys so Dana 44s 3.73 axle - my end is 35/36" tires. Besides upgrading brake lines, anything else need to be done to ensure vehicle lasts 40 years? I keep being told repair shop social media videos that lifting a vehicle is fine but it ruins life of the vehicle.

Do I need to do shocks and drive shafts, shocks bilsteins the best?
A lift does not ruin a vehicle. You have more work to do to maintain the lift but as long as you do proper maintenance on the lift and the vehicle itself you should have no problem having a vehicle that long. It may need a new engine or ball joints or bushing because they wear out from use, but that’s to be expected. I think people who say the vehicles life span is shortened is because 90+% of people do not know how to or care to properly maintain their vehicle. More people are “use and discard” types these days.

Best things you can buy for a properly planned lift is a good quality grease gun and dependable tools to maintain it.
Sponsored

 
 







Top