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The 7 BEST All Weather Tyres Tested

Jonathan Benson
Tested and written by Jonathan Benson
11 min read

Adjust Result Weighting

The overall scores below are calculated using our weighting system based on the test methodology. You can adjust the weightings below to explore how different priorities affect the results.

Dry 30%
Wet 35%
Snow 20%
Ice 5%
Comfort 5%
Value 5%
Dry 30% · Wet 35% · Snow 20% · Ice 5% · Comfort 5% · Value 5%
Fine-tune sub-categories
Dry
Wet
Snow
Ice
Comfort
Value

Test Results Data

BEST Good Average Below Average
# Tyre Total Score Dry Wet Snow Ice Comfort Value
Braking M Handling s Subj. Dry Handling Points % Braking M Handling s Subj. Wet Handling Points Straight Aqua Km/H Curved Aquaplaning m/sec2 % Braking M Traction s Handling s Subj. Snow Handling Points % Braking M Traction s % Subj. Comfort Points Subj. Noise Points Noise dB % Value Price/1000 Rolling Resistance kg / t %
1 Michelin CrossClimate 2 AW 97.4% 37.33 73.85 9.75 2 99.4% 34.41 3 74.65 3 9.5 2 83.7 8.8 3 96.9% 16.38 2 3.21 84.26 9.5 99.4% 10.2 9.79 3 98% 8.5 9 72 92.6% 14.67 7.05 85.2%
2 Goodyear Assurance WeatherReady 2 96% 39.5 2 73.12 10 97.3% 32.85 73.78 10 79.5 7.1 98.2% 16.67 3.35 86.62 9 96.3% 10.96 3 10.42 91.6% 9.5 2 9 72.9 94.5% 13.2 9.24 77.3%
3 ▼1 Pirelli Scorpion WeatherActive 95.8% 40.86 3 73.29 2 9.75 2 95.3% 33.83 2 74.48 2 9.5 2 80.1 3 7.3 96.4% 16.77 3.25 85.81 9 97.3% 10.5 2 9.39 98.6% 9.5 2 10 70.3 98.8% 14.2 7.78 81.7%
4 Nokian Remedy WRG5 95% 40.96 73.63 3 9.75 2 95% 37.32 74.72 9 82.9 2 9.5 93.7% 16.52 3 3.24 3 84.28 2 10 99.4% 11.25 9.61 2 94.2% 9 9.5 2 72.8 94.5% 13 7.31 3 88%
5 Bridgestone WeatherPeak 93.8% 44.18 74.76 9.5 90.9% 36.15 75.02 8.5 79.6 9.2 2 93.6% 16.32 3.26 85.3 10 99.2% 11.1 10.1 92.4% 8.5 9.5 2 71.7 2 94% 12.06 3 7.14 2 92.2%
6 Firestone WeatherGrip 92.8% 44.32 74.04 9.25 90.9% 37.64 75.1 8.5 78.6 8.3 91.6% 16.77 3.22 2 85.24 3 10 98.8% 11.05 11.14 88.3% 10 8.5 72.5 94.7% 11.08 2 7.65 92.7%
7 Toyo Celsius 2 92.6% 42.41 74.08 9.75 2 93.2% 38.24 75.54 8.5 77.9 7.5 90.3% 16.57 3.24 3 86.78 9.5 97.9% 11.67 11.5 84.5% 8.5 9.5 2 71.8 3 94% 10.33 8.55 91.2%
Reference Summer 34.36 1 72.46 1 29.23 1 105.2% 71.53 1 13 1
Nokian Hakkapeliitta R5 SUV 15.1 1 3.08 1 79.8 1 8.9 1 6.4 1
Scroll for more
Dry 99% Wet 97% Snow 99% Ice 98% Comfort 93% Value 85%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 37.33 M
Dry Handling 73.85 s
Subj. Dry Handling 9.75 Points 2
Wet
Wet Braking 34.41 M 3
Wet Handling 74.65 s 3
Subj. Wet Handling 9.5 Points 2
Straight Aqua 83.7 Km/H
Curved Aquaplaning 8.8 m/sec2 3
Snow
Snow Braking 16.38 M 2
Snow Traction 3.21 s
Snow Handling 84.26 s
Subj. Snow Handling 9.5 Points
Ice
Ice Braking 10.2 M
Ice Traction 9.79 s 3
Comfort
Subj. Comfort 8.5 Points
Subj. Noise 9 Points
Noise 72 dB
Value
Value 14.67 Price/1000
Rolling Resistance 7.05 kg / t
Dry 97% Wet 98% Snow 96% Ice 92% Comfort 95% Value 77%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 39.5 M 2
Dry Handling 73.12 s
Subj. Dry Handling 10 Points
Wet
Wet Braking 32.85 M
Wet Handling 73.78 s
Subj. Wet Handling 10 Points
Straight Aqua 79.5 Km/H
Curved Aquaplaning 7.1 m/sec2
Snow
Snow Braking 16.67 M
Snow Traction 3.35 s
Snow Handling 86.62 s
Subj. Snow Handling 9 Points
Ice
Ice Braking 10.96 M 3
Ice Traction 10.42 s
Comfort
Subj. Comfort 9.5 Points 2
Subj. Noise 9 Points
Noise 72.9 dB
Value
Value 13.2 Price/1000
Rolling Resistance 9.24 kg / t
Dry 95% Wet 96% Snow 97% Ice 99% Comfort 99% Value 82%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 40.86 M 3
Dry Handling 73.29 s 2
Subj. Dry Handling 9.75 Points 2
Wet
Wet Braking 33.83 M 2
Wet Handling 74.48 s 2
Subj. Wet Handling 9.5 Points 2
Straight Aqua 80.1 Km/H 3
Curved Aquaplaning 7.3 m/sec2
Snow
Snow Braking 16.77 M
Snow Traction 3.25 s
Snow Handling 85.81 s
Subj. Snow Handling 9 Points
Ice
Ice Braking 10.5 M 2
Ice Traction 9.39 s
Comfort
Subj. Comfort 9.5 Points 2
Subj. Noise 10 Points
Noise 70.3 dB
Value
Value 14.2 Price/1000
Rolling Resistance 7.78 kg / t
Dry 95% Wet 94% Snow 99% Ice 94% Comfort 95% Value 88%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 40.96 M
Dry Handling 73.63 s 3
Subj. Dry Handling 9.75 Points 2
Wet
Wet Braking 37.32 M
Wet Handling 74.72 s
Subj. Wet Handling 9 Points
Straight Aqua 82.9 Km/H 2
Curved Aquaplaning 9.5 m/sec2
Snow
Snow Braking 16.52 M 3
Snow Traction 3.24 s 3
Snow Handling 84.28 s 2
Subj. Snow Handling 10 Points
Ice
Ice Braking 11.25 M
Ice Traction 9.61 s 2
Comfort
Subj. Comfort 9 Points
Subj. Noise 9.5 Points 2
Noise 72.8 dB
Value
Value 13 Price/1000
Rolling Resistance 7.31 kg / t 3
Dry 91% Wet 94% Snow 99% Ice 92% Comfort 94% Value 92%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 44.18 M
Dry Handling 74.76 s
Subj. Dry Handling 9.5 Points
Wet
Wet Braking 36.15 M
Wet Handling 75.02 s
Subj. Wet Handling 8.5 Points
Straight Aqua 79.6 Km/H
Curved Aquaplaning 9.2 m/sec2 2
Snow
Snow Braking 16.32 M
Snow Traction 3.26 s
Snow Handling 85.3 s
Subj. Snow Handling 10 Points
Ice
Ice Braking 11.1 M
Ice Traction 10.1 s
Comfort
Subj. Comfort 8.5 Points
Subj. Noise 9.5 Points 2
Noise 71.7 dB 2
Value
Value 12.06 Price/1000 3
Rolling Resistance 7.14 kg / t 2
Dry 91% Wet 92% Snow 99% Ice 88% Comfort 95% Value 93%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 44.32 M
Dry Handling 74.04 s
Subj. Dry Handling 9.25 Points
Wet
Wet Braking 37.64 M
Wet Handling 75.1 s
Subj. Wet Handling 8.5 Points
Straight Aqua 78.6 Km/H
Curved Aquaplaning 8.3 m/sec2
Snow
Snow Braking 16.77 M
Snow Traction 3.22 s 2
Snow Handling 85.24 s 3
Subj. Snow Handling 10 Points
Ice
Ice Braking 11.05 M
Ice Traction 11.14 s
Comfort
Subj. Comfort 10 Points
Subj. Noise 8.5 Points
Noise 72.5 dB
Value
Value 11.08 Price/1000 2
Rolling Resistance 7.65 kg / t
7
92.6%
Dry 93% Wet 90% Snow 98% Ice 85% Comfort 94% Value 91%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 42.41 M
Dry Handling 74.08 s
Subj. Dry Handling 9.75 Points 2
Wet
Wet Braking 38.24 M
Wet Handling 75.54 s
Subj. Wet Handling 8.5 Points
Straight Aqua 77.9 Km/H
Curved Aquaplaning 7.5 m/sec2
Snow
Snow Braking 16.57 M
Snow Traction 3.24 s 3
Snow Handling 86.78 s
Subj. Snow Handling 9.5 Points
Ice
Ice Braking 11.67 M
Ice Traction 11.5 s
Comfort
Subj. Comfort 8.5 Points
Subj. Noise 9.5 Points 2
Noise 71.8 dB 3
Value
Value 10.33 Price/1000
Rolling Resistance 8.55 kg / t
Dry 105% Wet 111%
View detailed scores
Dry
Dry Braking 34.36 M 1
Dry Handling 72.46 s 1
Wet
Wet Braking 29.23 M 1
Wet Handling 71.53 s 1
Subj. Wet Handling 13 Points 1
Snow 106% Ice 131%
View detailed scores
Snow
Snow Braking 15.1 M 1
Snow Traction 3.08 s 1
Snow Handling 79.8 s 1
Ice
Ice Braking 8.9 M 1
Ice Traction 6.4 s 1
Not every driver has the same priorities. Adjust the category weightings above to re-rank the tyres based on what matters most to your driving style.
Scores are colour-coded from red (weakest) through yellow to green (strongest) to help you quickly spot each tyre's strengths and weaknesses.
The original test ranking is shown in the # column. Arrows indicate how each tyre moves when your custom weighting is applied.

Discussion

28 comments
  1. PSobes archived

    These AW tires are quite close to the Hakka R5 reference tire in the winter tests. R5 is northern European friction tire? How much closer would the AW tires be to a central European winter tire? As a road rep in NW Colorado mountains and into Wyo and Montana, I've always gravitated toward performance winter tires vs studless just to get better wear and longer life, but with better winter characteristics than all seasons. Seems I could now go All Weathers year round now and not give up much except pure ice ability?

    #10563
  2. David archived

    How much variation might tire size add to the equation? I'm currently running some Pirelli P7 AS Plus 3 in size 245/40-19, and may be needing some replacements in the not too distant future. Being in the southeast, snow/ice is not a significant concern, plus, if necessary, I have other vehicles that would be better suited to those conditions.

    #10494
    1. TyreReviews David archived

      There can be some small variances based on test size, however we regularly see that a good tire is a good tire, so I wouldn't worry about it too much.

      #10496
  3. Andrzej Wielgosz archived

    Hi. This are all weather tyres for USA. This tyres are avaible in Europe? Correctly in Poland? I search best of the best. You show us - all weather tyres are better than all season. In Europe we have all season, thats right. Can i buy all weather tyres in Europe, Poland? Searching at sites www give not satisfactionary results. Have a nice day, my English is poor.

    #10484
    1. TyreReviews Andrzej Wielgosz archived

      No, you can't purchase these in Europe. They are similar performance to European all season tyres, so don't worry you're not missing out. Buy tyres from this category: https://www.tyrereviews.com...

      PS your english is good.

      #10485
  4. Rannie BattleJr archived

    I am looking into a new set of Tires. I am currently in the warranty process of getting rid of Pirelli Scorpion AS 3plus. They dry rotted at 50k miles. They are a 70k mile tire. I am currently looking at the Michelin CC2 and Goodyear Assurance Weather Ready 2. I live in the Northeast of the USA and we haven't had a ton of snow in my area in a while, plus I drive to the South often (I often drive very "spirited" so I need great handling as well). Would the CC2 be the better choice or should I give the Weather Ready 2 a chance?

    #10055
  5. SomeGerman archived

    This might be a dumb question but what's the difference of an all weather vs. an all season tyre given the fairly recent review of https://www.tyrereviews.com/Tyre-Tests/Best-All-Season-Tyres-2024-2025.htm ? At least in Germany, the terminology is mixed into one category basically whilst this review shows a focus on the AW part. E.g., the Michelin CrossClimate 2 appears to be available with and without the "AW" in its name. At the same time, Michelin apparently mixes it into one category on its German website as well? https://www.michelin.de/auto/tipps/leitfaden-winterreifen/winterreifen-oder-allwetterreifen
    Just looking at the Snow Braking distances of the Michelin CrossClimate 2 in the linked review compared to this one, it appears the "AW" variant has 1.69m shorter distance to brake in your testing.

    #9983
    1. TyreReviews SomeGerman archived

      Not a dumb question, tyres are very confusing. All weather is basically the same as the European all season tyre, except its designed for the american market so the CC2 AW is a different tyre (more tread depth, higher rolling resistance etc)

      Comparing snow braking between tests is sadly not possible as snow can offer quite a varying amount of grip. Michelin say the two tyres should have comparable snow grip.

      #9984
      1. SomeGerman TyreReviews archived

        Hi, thanks for the response!
        Does the linked all season test refer to European variants then or is there a differentiation in the US regarding all season vs. All weather? Just trying to wrap my head around on which tests can be referred to for the all season / all weather tyres

        #10004
        1. TyreReviews SomeGerman archived

          I have not performed a US spec all season test before, all the all season articles on the site are EU region specific. All weather are US specific. I have made a few UHP all season tests, which are US specific.

          I will work out a way of highlighting that in the article.

          #10005
          1. SomeGerman TyreReviews archived

            Thanks for clarifying and the in-depth reviews in general!

            #10007
      2. Bryan Wilson TyreReviews archived

        Sorry, I still don't get it.
        I live in Denmark and I need a tire that will stay on my car all year. I have the money to spare and I just want the best tire available.
        Do I go with the Pirelli Cinturato All Season SF3, as this article would indicate I should do? https://www.tyrereviews.com/Tyre-Tests/Best-All-Season-Tyres-2024-2025.htm
        Or do I go with the Michelin CrossClimate 2, as this article would indicate I should do? https://www.tyrereviews.com/Tyre-Tests/The-7-BEST-All-Weather-Tyres-Tested.htm

        Sorry if I'm just incredibly daft.

        #10014
          1. Bryan Wilson TyreReviews archived

            Straight to the point - I like it! Thank you very much :)

            #10029
    2. Sukuma SomeGerman archived

      All Weather tires in North America carry the snowflake and mountain label similar to Snow/Winter tires. All Season Tires do not. In some designations (eg, Quebec, British Columbia, etc) tires must have that symbol to be legal for snow conditions.

      #10381
  6. Eric McLeod archived

    Thanks for this very useful information.

    #9967
  7. mikewinddale archived

    I love this. Thank you so much - especially for the ice braking test! This is extremely informative. Thank you!

    If you ever have a chance to repeat this test in the future, there is one particular tire I would love to see tested:
    Hankook WeatherFlex GT - successor to the Kinergy 4S2, which seems to get excellent reviews from European testers, so I'd love to see the American version tested against other all-weather tires.

    It would also be nice to see a reference American all-season tire, rather than a summer tire. Most Americans are going to be comparing 4-season tires to 3-seasons. I'd like to see how much wet grip an all-weather sacrifices compared to a more relevant alternative.

    And a few other budget tires too, if you can:
    General AltiMax 365AW
    Kumho Solus HA32
    Falken Aklimate
    Nexen N Blue 4S 2
    Nitto Motivo 365

    It would be particularly interesting to see how a budget all-weather tire compares to a mid-tier all-season tire. Some people can only afford mid-tier all-season tires. To afford an all-weather tire, they have to go down a step. So it would be nice to know if something like the Nexen or Nitto can be recommended in good faith to less-affluent friends and family.

    Regardless, thank you again, so very much!

    #9966
    1. TyreReviews mikewinddale archived

      I agree, I should have included a US all season tire instead, that was a mistake on my part, but I do have videos comparing the categories (check the YT description)

      Would have loved to include the General / Falken / Kumho etc but sadly it was out of budget.

      #9968
  8. John archived

    Currently on my 3rd car using Cross Climate 2 (well, the first car was using Cross Climate 1).

    I guess I am still going to stick to Cross Climate 2. In Ontario weather, I do wish it had slightly better grip on covered surfaces (I'm also used to X-Ice but stopped using them 8 years ago) but I guess I'm asking too much.

    Wait for Cross Climate 3?

    #9961
    1. TyreReviews John archived

      There will always be a delta between X-Ice type tyres and all weather tyres, they have very different targets to meet!

      #9964
  9. homes archived

    Great test and very useful results! You mentioned the reference winter tire but not the reference summer tire. Could you disclose the name of the reference summer tire?

    #9960
    1. TyreReviews homes archived

      Sure, it was the Nokian Hakka Green 3.

      #9963
  10. ss76 archived

    We're looking forward for the european test to see if goodyear will launch Vector4season GEN-4

    #9959
    1. TyreReviews ss76 archived

      Currently I have no information about a gen-4 so sadly I don't think I will be testing it this season as all the tests have already started

      #9962
        1. TyreReviews Jonathan archived

          The first EU all season test will be out at the end of April

          #9969
          1. ss76 TyreReviews archived

            Looking forward! I it will be time to replace Goodyear Vector4seaons GEN-2 SUV 215/55/18 and it help me choose!

            #10013