The Nissan Frontier is one of the most reliable mid-size trucks on the market — and one of the most overlooked in the aftermarket audio world. Most under-seat enclosure brands focus on full-size trucks and ignore the mid-size segment entirely. That means Frontier owners end up with one of two bad options: a generic "universal" box that fits poorly, or nothing at all.
This guide covers what sub sizes actually work in the Frontier's tighter under-seat space, why fitment precision matters more in a mid-size truck than a full-size, how the realistic options compare, and what you get from a SubCab built specifically to Frontier dimensions.
Crew Cab vs King Cab: Understanding the Frontier's Under-Seat Space
The Frontier comes in two cab configurations that matter for under-seat audio. The difference in available space between them is more pronounced than in a full-size truck — because you're starting with less room to begin with:
- Crew Cab (4-door, full-size rear doors, 2005–2026) — The larger of the two options. The rear under-seat pocket is the deepest available in the Frontier and supports 8", 10", and 12" single-sub configurations. Dual 8" and dual 10" setups also fit. If you want a dual configuration, you need the Crew Cab.
- King Cab (4-door, smaller fold-down rear doors, 2005–2026) — Significantly less under-seat depth than the Crew Cab. 8" and 10" single configurations fit cleanly. Dual configurations and 12" setups are not supported — the space constraints are too tight to close the seat properly around larger enclosures.
The Frontier's smaller footprint is a feature, not a bug — it's why Frontier owners buy it instead of a Titan. But it does mean under-seat audio requires a purpose-built enclosure more than it does in a full-size truck. A full-size truck "universal" box won't fit under a Frontier seat. A Frontier-specific box built to exact tolerances will.
Why Fitment Precision Matters More in a Mid-Size Truck
In a full-size truck, there's often some margin for error. The under-seat pocket is deep enough that a slightly undersized box still produces reasonable bass. In a mid-size truck like the Frontier, that margin disappears. Every cubic inch of internal enclosure volume matters because you have fewer cubic inches to work with.
A properly fit Frontier enclosure:
- Maximizes the available acoustic volume — fills the under-seat pocket to its actual dimensions rather than leaving unused space around a generic box
- Eliminates rattle — a box that fits precisely doesn't move; a loose box vibrates against the floor pan and seat mounting hardware
- Maintains seat function — a vehicle-specific design is built around the folding seat mechanism so the seat operates exactly as stock after installation
This is particularly important in the Frontier because the King Cab's under-seat space is genuinely tight — a box that's even a few millimeters too tall in the wrong dimension will prevent the seat from closing properly. There's no adjustment you can make in the field. The box either fits or it doesn't.
Sealed Enclosures in a Mid-Size Cab
The Frontier's acoustic environment has characteristics worth understanding before selecting a sub size:
- Smaller cab volume — a mid-size cab has less interior airspace than a full-size truck. Bass frequencies build up differently in smaller spaces. A sealed enclosure manages this better than a ported design, which can produce uneven, boomy bass in small cab environments.
- Tighter bass response is preferred — sealed enclosures in smaller cabs tend to produce punchy, tight bass rather than the extended low-end boom you'd get from a ported box in a large cab. For Frontier owners who listen to rock, country, or mixed genres, this is the better acoustic profile.
- Volume ceiling — because you're working with a smaller enclosure than a full-size truck, you won't get the same maximum output. A dual 12" in a Silverado will outperform a single 10" in a Frontier at full volume. But for daily listening at reasonable levels, the Frontier setup sounds excellent — and is significantly better than no bass at all.
Comparison: SubCab vs Major Alternatives
The mid-size truck segment is even more underserved than the full-size Titan segment. Here's the realistic competitive landscape for Frontier buyers:
| Brand | Price Range | Lead Time | Frontier Fitment | Customization | Construction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SubCab | $174–$314 | 10–21 days | Crew + King Cab specific | Color, size, single/dual | 3/4" MDF, built-to-order |
| Skar Audio | $120–$280 | 1–3 days | No Frontier-specific option | Size only | MDF, shelf stock |
| MTI Acoustics | $250–$450 | 3–5 weeks | No Frontier coverage | Limited options | MDF or fiberglass |
| Custom local fab | $400–$900+ | 2–8 weeks | Fully custom | Any spec | Varies by shop |
The Frontier is the starkest example of a truck that falls through the cracks of aftermarket audio. Skar Audio doesn't carry Frontier enclosures. MTI doesn't cover the Frontier. Your realistic options are SubCab at $174–$314 with 10–14 day turnaround, or a local custom fab at 2–4x the price and a longer wait. The 3/4" MDF construction SubCab uses is the right spec for sealed acoustic enclosures at this price point — thinner MDF panels flex under pressure and lose bass definition at higher volumes.
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Configure My Frontier →What Sub Size Should You Choose?
For the Frontier specifically, given the mid-size cab constraints:
8" Subwoofer
Best for: King Cab builds, accuracy over output, and situations where rear legroom is a priority. The 8" is the most versatile option for the Frontier — it fits in both cab types and produces tight, accurate bass that works well in the Frontier's smaller acoustic environment. If you listen to rock, country, or acoustic music, the 8" is the cleanest choice.
10" Subwoofer
Best for: the best balance of output and accuracy available in the Frontier. More bass than an 8" without the space requirements of a 12". For Crew Cab owners who want meaningful bass with all seating functional, the 10" single or dual configuration is the most popular choice. Dual 10" in a Crew Cab is as much bass as you'll get from the Frontier's under-seat space without a custom trunk install.
12" Subwoofer
Best for: Crew Cab only, maximum bass output. The 12" single works in the Frontier Crew Cab and delivers the most output available from a Frontier under-seat build. It's the largest configuration SubCab offers for the Frontier — the King Cab's geometry doesn't support it. If you have a Crew Cab and want maximum bass without giving up the rear seat, the 12" single is the top choice.
See the full Nissan Frontier configuration page for pricing and fitment on every cab type and sub configuration.