Doesn't matter. As the tyre wears its circumference reduces, meaning it must rotate faster for the car to do the same speed. As the speedo is driven from the rotation of the wheels it will progressively over-read as the tyre wears
Put another way, if you have a set of brand new types on a car and you tow that car at 100mph (let's say, using a truck whose speedo reads 100mph) and the car speedo reads 100mph, then stop and swap the new car tyres for worn out ones and again tow the car at 100mph on the truck speedo, the car speedo will read higher (say, 103.4)
This is permitted, and means if you drive the car at an indicated 100mph you will be doing up to, but not more than 100mph