Lightweight Custom Utility Trailer for MY26 Jimny — Design Feedback Wa

Submitted: Monday, Jun 01, 2026 at 23:42
ThreadID: 152605 Views:459 Replies:6 FollowUps:5
Hi all, I’m working on the design brief for a lightweight custom utility trailer to tow behind a MY26 Suzuki Jimny JB74 3-door, and I’d appreciate feedback from people with real-world trailer fabrication, towing, off-road trailer or lightweight 4WD touring experience.

This is not intended to be a camper trailer and not a heavy expedition build. The goal is a lightweight, stable, practical utility trailer matched to a small tow vehicle.

The trailer will be used for:

* rural property and farm work
* compact ride-on / zero-turn mower transport
* firewood and general property loads
* Snowy Mountains / alpine utility use
* mild off-road and touring support
* occasional vehicle-powered accessory use from the Jimny

The design priority is safe towing, low tare, controlled towball weight, serviceability and practical loading, rather than maximum ATM or lots of accessories.

Tow Vehicle Context

The trailer is being designed around a completed MY26 Suzuki Jimny JB74 3-door, not a generic tow vehicle.

Jimny build context:

* MY26 Suzuki Jimny JB74 3-door, Bluish Black Pearl
* Lightweight OEM+ touring/property build
* No GVM upgrade planned
* OME 50 mm lift with correction hardware and professional alignment
* King D-Locker 15×7 ET0 wheels
* BFGoodrich All-Terrain T/A KO3 LT215/75R15 tyres
* Full-size matching spare
* Hayman Reese X-Bar towbar with integrated rear recovery points
* 12-pin flat trailer socket pre-wired for electric trailer brakes
* Redarc Tow-Pro Elite V3 brake controller
* Rear 50A Anderson plug
* 6 B&S twin-core positive/negative cabling, no chassis-earth return
* Ignition-isolated Anderson feed
* Rear-mounted spare wheel and side-opening rear door

The trailer needs to work around the Jimny’s rear-mounted spare, side-opening rear door, X-Bar recovery loops, 12-pin plug, Anderson plug and a DO35-compatible hitch/tongue setup.

Trailer Design Intent

The current trailer concept is:

* lightweight single-axle utility trailer
* builder-recommended ATM, likely around 750–1000 kg
* typical operating mass from empty through approx. 300–650 kg loaded
* target internal body size around 1900 mm L × 1450 mm W × 300 mm H
* low tare preferred over maximum payload
* loaded towball target around 50–70 kg
* empty towball target around 25–35 kg, treated as an optimisation target rather than a rigid pass/fail figure
* electric brakes compatible with Redarc Tow-Pro Elite V3
* Cruisemaster DO35 coupling from initial build
* mechanical parking brake / handbrake required
* no fixed trailer battery, solar, inverter, fridge system or camper fit-out
* no large permanent toolbox
* no dedicated trailer spare if the Jimny spare can be safely and legally used as an emergency spare

The aim is to avoid turning the trailer into a mini expedition trailer that overwhelms the Jimny.

Loads and Use Cases

The main load cases are:

1. Empty trailer
2. Compact ride-on / zero-turn mower, approx. 250–300 kg
3. Up to approx. 300 kg firewood or general property load
4. Occasional heavier/emergency use only, not the normal design case

For mower loading, I’m looking at:

* compact ride-on / zero-turn mower envelope
* approx. 250–300 kg mower weight
* around 42-inch class deck preferred
* internal width around 1450 mm
* internal length around 1900 mm
* low-profile tailgate plus independent removable lightweight ramps
* ramps normally stored off the trailer unless needed
* when carried, preferred side-mounted ramp storage, one ramp each side, positioned near the axle line where practical
* rear stabiliser legs strongly considered for safe loading/unloading

I’m trying to avoid a tall, full-height ramp tailgate because of weight, wind drag, rattle and the likely ramp angle.

Construction Direction

I’m currently thinking the best solution is probably a lightweight hybrid build, but I’m open to builder recommendation.

Possible construction direction:

* galvanised or otherwise protected steel drawbar / high-stress coupling structure
* lightweight aluminium body or bed frame
* aluminium or checkerplate floor, designed for concentrated mower wheel loads
* reinforced rear hinge/pivot area
* reinforced tie-downs
* corrosion isolation between steel and aluminium
* no raw aluminium-to-steel contact
* drainage and inspection/serviceability designed in

I’m not trying to mandate the exact material, but the trailer needs to balance low tare with fatigue resistance, rural-road durability and repairability.

Suspension / Axle / Brakes

Preferred direction:

* single axle
* builder-recommended spring rate for real operating mass, not just maximum ATM
* electric brakes
* mechanical parking brake
* shocks/dampers preferred where practical, especially because the trailer will often run empty or lightly loaded behind a short-wheelbase Jimny
* axle position to be validated by actual weight modelling, not just a generic rule

I’m especially interested in feedback on whether dampers are worth making close to non-negotiable for a light trailer behind a short-wheelbase 4WD.

DO35 / Drawbar / Rear Door Clearance

This is one of the big packaging areas.

The trailer will use a Cruisemaster DO35 coupling. It needs to work with:

* Hayman Reese X-Bar
* rear recovery loops
* rear-mounted spare wheel
* side-opening Jimny rear door
* higher-clearance or extended DO35-compatible tongue/hitch
* handbrake placement
* jockey wheel placement
* safety chains
* 12-pin plug access
* Anderson plug access

The current thinking is that the builder should physically measure the completed Jimny before final welding or irreversible fabrication. I don’t want them guessing rear-door swing, X-Bar loop clearance or DO35 geometry from generic dimensions.

Preferred handbrake direction:

* low-profile
* side-mounted, recessed, fold-down or horizontal-pull if practical
* avoid a vertical handbrake lever in the rear-door/spare-wheel swing path

Preferred jockey-wheel direction:

* selected and positioned as part of the DO35/handbrake/safety-chain/rear-door clearance package
* swing-up, removable or side-mounted where practical
* must not interfere with rear door, spare wheel, DO35 coupling, handbrake, chains, plugs or X-Bar clearance

Wheels / Tyres / Spare Strategy

Preferred starting point for trailer wheels/tyres is:

* King Terra Black
* 15×6
* 5×139.7
* BFGoodrich KO3 195/80R15

But this is not fixed.

The Jimny spare is:

* King D-Locker
* 15×7
* ET0
* 5×139.7
* BFGoodrich KO3 LT215/75R15

The ideal would be no dedicated trailer spare, using the Jimny spare as an emergency trailer spare if safe and legal. But I understand this cannot be assumed from PCD alone.

The builder needs to confirm:

* PCD
* centre bore
* stud/nut type
* offset
* hub/brake clearance
* guard clearance
* tyre rolling diameter
* suspension compression clearance
* legal/safe emergency use

I’m open to the builder comparing two options:

1. trailer-optimised wheel/tyre package for low tare and best towing behaviour
2. full Jimny-spare-compatible package, accepting possible width/guard/aesthetic trade-offs

Mechanical safety and stable towing matter more than perfect visual matching.

Electrical

The trailer should not have a permanent battery or camper electrical setup.

Electrical intent:

* road lights through 12-pin
* electric brakes through 12-pin
* compatible with Redarc Tow-Pro Elite V3
* optional work/loading lights only if simple and safe
* optional lights could use either confirmed 12-pin auxiliary provision or the rear Anderson feed
* Anderson feed is ignition-isolated, so the trailer should not assume power is live when the vehicle is off
* appropriate fusing, weather protection and wiring protection required

What I’m Looking For Feedback On

I’d really appreciate comments on:

* whether the target 50–70 kg loaded towball download is realistic for this type of trailer behind a Jimny
* whether the 25–35 kg empty towball target is too ambitious
* ideal axle placement approach for a trailer this short/light
* whether dampers/shocks are strongly recommended
* best suspension type for empty-to-650 kg real-world use
* DO35 drawbar geometry behind a small 4WD with rear-mounted spare
* handbrake and jockey-wheel placement to avoid rear-door interference
* whether 1900 × 1450 × 300 mm internal body size sounds sensible
* whether a subtle beavertail or dropped rear section is worth it for mower loading
* best ramp length/storage strategy
* whether hybrid steel/aluminium is sensible or whether I should keep it simpler
* whether Jimny spare compatibility is worth designing around
* any obvious fabrication traps or compliance issues I’m missing

Overall, I’m trying to design a small, light, stable, serviceable utility trailer that suits a Jimny, rather than a generic box trailer or heavy off-road camper.

Any real-world feedback from trailer builders, fabricators, engineers, Jimny owners or people who tow light trailers off-road would be much appreciated.
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Reply By: Member - shane r1 - Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 15:55

Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 15:55
Well that’s an extensive list. Are you overthinking?
Take it to a fabrication place and get a quote?
AnswerID: 649277

Reply By: Member - shane r1 - Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 16:00

Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 16:00
Without re reading your extensive post….what is your jimny actually rated to tow , braked and unbraked?
AnswerID: 649278

Follow Up By: Stephen L (Clare) SA - Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 16:03

Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 16:03
Most likely a loaf of bread
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Follow Up By: Stephen L (Clare) SA - Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 16:10

Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 16:10
Sorry Shane, I made a mistake, should have been 3 loaves of bread………

According to Mr Google, they have a strict payload of 325 to 360 kg, which includes fuel, luggage and passengers.

So on those weights, you can definitely rule out electric brakes.
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Follow Up By: Member - shane r1 - Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 18:00

Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 18:00
Hahaha
Stephen I reckon I got 4 loaves in my 2015 ,but might squeeze more in the new model!
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Reply By: Batt's - Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 21:12

Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 21:12
My opinion from previous experience of a friend buying a light trailer then built a canopy to enclose it to carry 2 x 600cc motor bikes and 4 jerry cans of fuel it ended up trouble. Light weight axle with ford car wheel bearings that weren't up to the task cracks developed in the frame and the suspension was too hard with no shock absorbers to help absorbe the rough terrain. No brakes which made it harder for the tow vehicle to pull it up.
I would use an override brake at minimum a descent chassis for strength, springs and shocks to suit be it leafs or independent and adjust tyre pressures to suit the terrain. A larger than average size jockey wheel that is strong overall because you may have to disconnect it one day and pull it through an obstacle the average jockey wheel would probably bend and break. Probably not what you want to hear but if you go too light in weight be prepared to do repairs over time or even leave it on the side of the road if or when it breaks down.
AnswerID: 649279

Reply By: Peter_n_Margaret - Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 23:39

Tuesday, Jun 02, 2026 at 23:39
Tough, light = plastic.
Rotomoulded polyethylene in this case.
I have made all the moulds for all my own fuel and water tanks for my OKAs. Diesel tanks up to 200L and a 130L water tank that replaced stainless steel that is heavy, expensive and fatigues and cracks. This stuff never fatigues.
Light weight and bullet proof. This 130L custom tank weighs 15kg. It needs no rock protection for the bush. The ones on my vehicles are 10kg not 15kg and 5 to 6mm wall thickness.

I would talk to these guys.
They are not the only ones. I have no experience with any of these, but the material and process is definitely the way to go.
Fit it with Jimny wheels and tyres.
Cheers,
Peter
OKA196 motorhome
AnswerID: 649281

Reply By: Gbc.. - Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 09:06

Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 09:06
As I was reading it I immediately thought of an old thread on expedition portal.
I'd start with a twin cab ute sized dropside tray (1800x1800) - rated to carry whatever you want and well proven.
Then find a wrecked subaru (forester?) that will run a similar wheel track to your jimny. The independent rear suspension on most subes is in a frame that just unbolts and will bolt back up to a ute tray with no problem. The brakes can be hooked back up for manual/hydro override/handbrake.
Build your A frame and you're done, with fully tuneable suspension to suit any load state.

Found the old build thread here.

https://forum.expeditionportal.com/threads/homebuilt-subaru-irs-trailer.19803/
AnswerID: 649283

Reply By: Member - Happy Explorer - Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 10:08

Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 10:08
Hi Snowbum
My first thought on this was that plastic could be a great option here. That is something you would have to consider for yourself and weigh up the pros/cons.
What Peter said makes sense.
I have built a few box trailers as well as our current 4.5m hybrid camper trailer, all successful projects.
A couple considerations here:
1. You are definitely over thinking this and besides massive cost blowout it will likely exceed your AGM before you even load it.
2. Internal body width of 1450mm could hardly be considered small and light especially behind a Jimny. A standard box trailer is generally 1200mm wide internally. To have a trailer that has the same wheel track and overall width as your tow vehicle makes a lot of sense especially for off road work. A trailer poking out the sides just adds another thing to be considering when towing. Your trailer will tow better off road if following in the tow vehicles wheel tracks as well. My hybrid will fit wherever my Prado will fit. A comforting thought on and off road. You didn't say how wide your mower is but if you are going with a sheet floor of some sort (aluminium checker plate or plywood) try to utilise a single sheet width to avoid a join down the centre. I have always used plywood on trailer floors as it is quieter and the load does not tend to slip around as easily. Also it is sacrificial and can be easily and cheaply replaced if accidentally damaged, however it is resilient and damage doesn't seem to be an issue.
3. I agree with Peter, match the trailer wheels to your tow vehicle so spare is interchangeable and tyres can be rotated using trailer wheels as necessary. Looks great too.
4. Forget about brakes and aim to stay within un-braked regulations, unless you have re-powered the Jimny with a 5l v8 ;). Brakes will add considerable unsprung weight to your suspension that may not be desirable. Carry a couple wheel chocks for unhitching on a slope.
5. Go with a good quality leaf spring suspension. One with greasable spring shackles, not slipper springs. Much lighter and probably works better than heavy independent suspension on a light often empty trailer. I have independent trailing arm suspension with airbags on my hybrid, however that is set up for a fairly constant load. I just don't think it would work on a box trailer. I am aware of a horse float that has been successfully converted to independent airbags but certainly adds weight and significant height increase overall.
6. Tow ball loading is simply mathematical and determined in the drawing stage.
7. Add a work light to the back of the tow vehicle as a practical option.
8. You should not have any issue with keeping 'A' frame equipment set low within the frame itself. You may need to use a removable jockey wheel rather than a swing up one to achieve this. Probably not though. Be sure to design enough length into the 'A' frame to accommodate the rear door swing. A bit longer makes for a better behaved trailer anyway. Consider allowing enough length to fit a tool box on the 'A' frame in front of the body for tie down strap storage and possible storage for the jockey wheel if needing to be removable.
9. The DO35 is a good hitch option and probably one of the more low profile options out there.
10. My understanding is that trailers now need engineering certification. I think this is in all states and makes one off fabrication a less attractive proposition.
Just my thoughts and experience
Roy
AnswerID: 649284

Follow Up By: Nomadic Navara - Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 13:38

Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 13:38
Quote: "4. Forget about brakes and aim to stay within un-braked regulations,"

Really? All the current models of Jimny have a Braked Towing Capacity of 1300 kg and an Unbraked Towing Capacity 350 kg.


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Follow Up By: Member - Happy Explorer - Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 17:15

Thursday, Jun 04, 2026 at 17:15
Exactly Peter
I wonder why only 350kg?
150kg trailer tare and 200kg load is probably just about right for a safe reliable setup here.
Beyond that we should be talking about a much more capable tow vehicle.
Each will have their own opinion on this though I am sure.
Roy
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