What’s the Best Touring Tire for Premium CUVs?

What’s the Best Touring Tire for Premium CUVs? 2024 Test 2 - With Winter Update

Published June 12, 2024

Methodology

Our Testing Formula

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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.

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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.

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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

Are EV-Specific Tires Better than Popular Non-EV Tires? – 2025 Test 1

Length: (34:07)

Tires Tested

Vehicle(s) Used

2023 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Q4

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Test Report

Introduction

This is our first Crossover/SUV Touring All-Season test of the year on our new Alfa Romeo Stelvio test vehicle. Naturally, we wanted to take a look at some fresh tires alongside some of the most popular options to see how everything stacks up. There are a lot of tires to check out - and while they're mostly from the same category, anyone familiar with tires and our testing will tell you that even the top-reviewed upper echelon of tires can have significant variations in road noise, comfort, wet grip, handling, and more. Furthermore, it's a mix of all-weather and non-3PMSF branded tires, and given the greater winter focus of the former, did it result in making meaningful tradeoffs anywhere else?

We'll introduce each, break down our experiences with them on our real-world road ride, then discuss their traction and subjective behavior on both a wet and dry track to understand how these tires act when pushed to their limits, mimicking the kind of high-speed emergency maneuvers you might need to deal with in a sudden crisis.

In addition to the limit-pushing data and experience we gather from running laps, this and future tests of non-performance tires 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 sudden, reactive swerves a person might 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, pedestrian, or a moose, 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 maybe the vehicle isn't where it's supposed to be now, so it acts as the trigger to suddenly overcorrect and swerve back to the 3rd set of cones, returning to the "lane." Our goal is to look beyond "one size fits all" testing and better represent the kind of real-world concerns drivers have to deal with.

In the snow, longitudinal acceleration and braking both felt fine for the category - capable of generating speed and authoritatively shaving it off despite the conditions. The tire's lateral traction allowed our drivers to feel confident in most situations, even mid-corner rotation was usable without any panic-inducing moments. The Alenza AS Ultra wasn't the best in any one objective measurement, but particularly in winter conditions, being predictable and controlled made for a reliable partner.

Test Summary

There are a myriad of considerations when tire shopping, and even the "best" tire for one person may not fit your individual driving style, particular vehicle, or preferences. That's one of the many reasons we test: to explore the nuance and value across a wide spectrum of tires. Naturally, every tire has some strengths and weaknesses, and we've seen that repeatedly over the course of this test.

The Pirelli Scorpion AS Plus 3 is a perfect example of this, having led the test in subjective road ride scores, as well as its performance in the dry, but falling ever so slightly behind its competition in the wet and winter conditions. Not drastically so, but enough that it made a noteworthy difference. Contrarily, Pirelli's Scorpion WeatherActive makes an interesting counterpart to the Scorpion AS Plus 3, aiming for all-weather performance and practically matching its kin in on-road comfort, but not quite on the same level when pushed. During our snow driving, the Scorpion WeatherActive felt similarly unpolished. It was objectively strong on individual metrics or performance, but not as much when it came to blending them together in what felt like a cohesive whole. If that sounds like a back-handed compliment, it is - but is still a compliment nonetheless. Michelin's CrossClimate2 is undoubtably a focused tire - its directional design supports a goal of powerful wet and snow traction, and it mostly fulfills that mission well while also managing to provide decent on-road manners. Unfortunately, time and competition have caught up with it in many ways, and Michelin will need to continue to innovate and iterate to stay on top.

Yokohama's Geolandar CV4S shows us a tire that leans more into the performance side of the category, with very strong handling, wet and dry traction, and some reasonable winter driving, but not focusing quite as much on the luxury aspects of commuting. It hasn't been neglected, certainly, but some noticeable tonal noise in particular keep it from hitting all the marks. The Continental CrossContact LX25 was another tire that understands the general "touring" mission of not being too specialized by focusing on excellent wet and dry performance to keep drivers safe, while maintaining a comfortable, and notably quiet, on-road presence. Its winter performance is less laudable, but 3 out of 4 seasons aren't too bad. Yokohama's Geolandar CV G058 might have the distinction of being one of least compellingly named tires on this list, reading more like a serial number than a top-end product, but it's similarly so well-rounded and capable at what it does that there's few situations it wouldn't handle well - with the exception of winter driving. It's a tire that's worth considering, but if you live in a cold climate, it's also worth keeping a separate set of tires for the cold season.

The Bridgestone Alenza AS Ultra is a pretty good tire: not particularly loud, or uncomfortable or even especially weak in wet or dry weather when pushed. However, that is ultimately its Achilles' heel; it's a pretty good tire, but it's also just that. It just doesn't stand out in an already crowded field, apart from its better-than-average handling of winter weather. Finally, the Cooper Discoverer EnduraMax does manage to stand out, though not quite for the right reasons. To the tire's credit, it is capable in the dry and was reasonably comfortable during our road ride. However, it was not a compelling tire in the snow, and particularly struggled in the wet, especially compared to its peers, taking almost 21 ft further than the test leader to come to a stop from 50mph. That kind of gulf is simply too significant to hand wave away.

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.

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