The Toyota Tundra has a legitimate claim that the competition can't match: the CrewMax has the widest rear seat of any half-ton truck. More rear cab width means more under-seat volume. More volume means a better sealed enclosure. If you're building a Tundra audio system, you have a geometry advantage that most truck owners don't.

This guide covers what actually fits in a CrewMax vs Double Cab, the acoustic tradeoffs of the Tundra's interior geometry, how competitors compare, and what configuration makes sense depending on how you use the truck.

CrewMax vs Double Cab: What Fits and What Doesn't

Toyota sells the Tundra in two cab configurations that matter for under-seat audio:

Sellers who say "fits Tundra" without specifying cab type are giving you useless information. The CrewMax and Double Cab have fundamentally different interior dimensions — the same enclosure won't fit both correctly. A vehicle-specific build means your box is profiled to the cab you actually own.

Why the CrewMax Is Special for Audio

The Tundra CrewMax's rear cab dimensions are a genuine advantage for under-seat audio, not marketing copy. Here's what that means in practice:

Sound Quality vs Bass Output: The Sealed Enclosure Tradeoff

Under-seat enclosures are sealed by design — the under-seat space doesn't allow for port tuning length at reasonable volumes. What sealed gets you in the Tundra:

Comparison: SubCab vs Major Alternatives

Here's how the main options compare for Tundra buyers:

Brand Price Range Lead Time Tundra Fitment Customization Construction
SubCab $174–$314 10–21 days CrewMax + Double Cab specific Color, size, single/dual 3/4" MDF, built-to-order
Skar Audio $120–$280 1–3 days Generic "fits most trucks" Size only MDF, shelf stock
MTI Acoustics $250–$450 3–5 weeks Vehicle-specific Limited options MDF or fiberglass options
Super Crew Sound $350–$600+ 4–8 weeks Tundra-specific High customization Fiberglass, premium

Skar Audio ships quickly at a low price but sells generic boxes — not profiled to Tundra tolerances. MTI Acoustics and Super Crew Sound offer vehicle-specific fitment at higher prices and longer lead times. SubCab: Tundra-specific design (CrewMax and Double Cab), $174–$314 depending on config, 10–14 day turnaround on standard builds.

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What Sub Size Should You Choose?

For the Tundra specifically, here's the practical breakdown:

8" Subwoofer

Best for: accuracy-focused listening, tight bass, Double Cab builds. An 8" in a properly tuned sealed enclosure delivers significantly cleaner bass than a cheap 12" in a generic box. If you prioritize rock, country, jazz, or acoustic genres, the 8" is the right call. Smallest footprint also means maximum legroom preservation, which matters in the Double Cab's tighter rear space.

10" Subwoofer

Best for: the balanced daily driver setup. More output than an 8" without the space requirements of a 12". The most popular Tundra configuration. Dual 10" in a CrewMax gives you serious bass output while keeping all rear seating fully functional. Works for any genre at any listening volume.

12" Subwoofer

Best for: maximum bass, CrewMax recommended. Single 12" works in both cab types. Dual 12" is CrewMax-only. In the Tundra CrewMax specifically, a dual 12" sealed setup performs better than it would in most trucks — the wider, deeper under-seat pocket gives you more internal volume to work with, producing bass extension you genuinely feel rather than just hear.

See the full Toyota Tundra configuration guide for pricing and fitment details on every year and cab type.

Why 3/4" MDF Matters for the Tundra

The Tundra CrewMax's under-seat pocket is generous — but that generosity is in specific dimensions. A box built to 3/4" MDF tolerances exploits that space cleanly. MDF is denser than particle board, machines to tight tolerances, and doesn't flex under pressure. A sealed enclosure that flexes loses bass energy to vibration rather than air movement.

Generic enclosures often use thinner walls to hit a price point. In the Tundra CrewMax's larger pocket, a thin-walled box will rattle and flex at volume. A properly built 3/4" MDF enclosure stays rigid across the entire frequency range — which is the whole point of a sealed design.