Highway All-Season: The Quietest, Most Comfortable Truck Tires

Highway All-Season: The Quietest, Most Comfortable Truck Tires 2024 Test 7 - With Winter Update

Published November 18, 2024

Methodology

Our Testing Formula

Icon of a testing track and an orange traffic cone

Custom Test Track

Located adjacent to our South Bend headquarters, our test track allows our team to discover how each tire will behave under the extremes of emergency situations on the road or the limits of performance in competition.

Icon of a sedan style car

Dedicated Fleet

Our fleet of test cars, an SUV, and a pickup truck are specially selected to give the best and most consistent results when testing tires.

Icon of a clip with bar charts with a check mark in a circle

Post-Test Ratings

Each tire model is tested and independently scored 1-10 on comfort and performance. We are the only retailer performing in-house, independent tire tests.

Learn More About How We Test

Test Result Video

Highway All-Season: The Quietest, Most Comfortable Truck Tires - 2024 Test 7 With Winter Update

Length: (24.17)

Tires Tested

Vehicle(s) Used

2024 Toyota Tacoma TRD Sport

Test Result Charts

Use these dropdowns to compare results and sort data to find any details you're looking for. When favorites are selected, this chart will default to only showing favorites. This can be changed by using the toggle below.

Spider Chart Comparison

Want to really get down to it with the data? Try this head-to-head comparison. When favorites are selected, this chart will default to showing favorites first.

Test Report

Introduction

Highway All-Season (HAS) tires are the practical, regular commuters that serve a wide variety of vehicles, with fitments for the most popular options—crossovers, pickups, vans, SUVs, and more. These are tires built for the road, for distance. These are the tires you wake up with every morning and drive on. Drivers depend on them for everyday travel through rain, sun, and snow. They're expected to maximize mileage and fuel economy while keeping drivers comfortable during their routine.

To test these workhorse tires, we finally have the perfect workhorse vehicle! Meet our brand new 2024 Tacoma TRD Sport, the fourth generation, redesigned and reengineered for this year and inspired by prior Toyota Baja racing trucks. Equipped with an 8-speed automatic transmission and a 2.4L turbocharged engine - and most importantly in "Solar Octane" Orange - this new version is designed for fun and function. We're excited to have a vehicle with the power, weight, and ride that represents one of the most common use cases for some of the most popular tire categories, including this Highway All-Season test.

Just because we have a shiny new truck doesn't mean we're shaking up the tried-and-true methodology you rely on. As with our other test reports this season: we'll introduce each tire, then break down our experiences on our real world road ride. After that, we'll discuss their traction and subjective behavior on both a wet and dry track to understand how these tires act when pushed to their limits. We'll also be testing braking and acceleration on snow and ice, as well as some light handling maneuvers, to give a full all-season, all-weather picture for each tire.

As with other tests of non-performance tires: we will reference our new "emergency lane change" maneuver. On a dry surface, from a target speed of 45 miles per hour, our drivers will pass through 3 sets of cones. Each point is designed to illustrate how the tires handle the kind of sudden, reactive swerves a person might actually make in an emergency situation. The 1st set indicates the point at which a person would react to the presence of an obstacle ahead, such as a stopped car or pedestrian, leaving the "lane." The 2nd set is the target placement to avoid the obstacle, indicating the lane change has succeeded, the obstacle was avoided, but the vehicle needs to return to the lane, so it acts as the trigger to suddenly recorrect and swerve back to the 3rd set of cones.

Test Summary

After all the brake dust had settled, one of the notable takeaways from this test was ultimately how close many of these tires actually were from an overall perspective. Some were louder or quieter, better or worse in the wet, or had a little more precise steering, and most tires were pretty firm - but the separation between some of the best and worst tires was ultimately slight. That isn't to say there weren't significant differences between them, because there certainly were in the winter portion of the test, but in many cases the effect was subtle.

Michelin's Defender LTX M/S2 strikes a compelling balance between all of its characteristics - it's nice for regular commuting, and it handles the stress of hard, emergency driving in all seasons with aplomb. In particular, it was a real star compared to its rivals here in the winter. Outside of that, it wasn't the best at any one thing, but it also wasn't particularly weak at any one thing either. We often talk about touring tires as a kind of "jack of all trades" and the Defender LTX M/S2 exemplifies that well. The Bridgestone Dueler LX and Continental TerrainContact H/T also emerged as favorites in this test, with well-balanced performance in both wet and dry conditions, as well as reasonable, if not exceptional, on-road drives.

Among the lower-traction tires in the test, the Vredestein Pinza HT was one of the better options, even if that comes across as a bit of a backhanded compliment, the narrow band between best-and-worst here is worth reiterating. It was subjectively one of the most composed tires on the road and the steering feel was among the greats, so the recognition is deserved. Its well-balanced handling and controllable winter behavior do their best to make up for a simple lack of grip the rest of the year though. General's Grabber H/T is similar to the Michelin in many respects, and even features a little nicer wet handling and road manners - if it weren't for its somewhat baffling lack of traction on the dry track and middling winter performance, it might be one of the top tires in the test.

The Firestone Destination LE3 and Kumho Crugen HT51 both fall into the less comfortable end of the spectrum when it comes to the daily grind of driving, which is what most people will be using them for. The Destination LE3 had a serviceable ride and above-average noise control, but for hard driving, it was still squishy, vague, and not particularly exceptional either. Combined with its underwhelming winter performance and lackadaisical steering, it's not a favorite. The Crugen HT51 was a bit of an odd one. It was our least favorite tire on the road, and in the wet, and wasn't fantastic in the cold, but was surprisingly nice when it was pushed around the dry track. That single, specific application is hardly enough to make up for its shortcomings, but it's a silver lining on an otherwise unremarkable cloud.

Finally, Goodyear's Wrangler Steadfast HT: it rides great, there's no doubt that it would be a go-to pick for road trips or long work commutes, and wasn't bad in the wet to boot. However, its understeer-biased dry performance was such a step down from all the other options in the test that it needs attention, as it failed most attempts to complete the emergency lane change maneuver. Coupled with some truly remarkable winter driving for all the wrong reasons, it's left in an unenviable position. The Wrangler Workhorse HT, also from Goodyear, was more balanced between wet and dry, and was nice enough on the road, but it matched its siblings poor winter behavior, and it didn't shine anywhere else either. Almost everything it did capably was done better by other tires.

Other Tire Tests

We can't help ourselves, we're always testing more tires out on the track. It's a good thing too, because with so many different categories and so many different features to evaluate, there aren't many places you're going to find this type of in-depth analysis. It's not a stretch to say with each tire test we do, you're going to learn something new - and maybe even find your next set of tires.

SERVICE WITH A SMILE

Need help choosing the right products for your vehicle? Our US-based team of highly trained experts has the knowledge and passion to help. Just pick up the phone and give us a ring. Or let's chat via email. We love solving problems and lending a hand (or an ear).

Contact Us
Three smiling Tire Rack employees