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Are Budget Tyres Finally Good Enough? 8 Cheap Tyres VS 1 Premium Tyre

Jonathan Benson
Tested and written by Jonathan Benson
9 min read Updated
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Discussion

20 comments
  1. alespa archived

    How bad is the ice performance of the current crop of all-seasons (& more specifically, the best) vs, say, a reference winter tire (blizzak/870/etc)?

    I'm looking at moving to all-seasons (the contis, in particular) for my winter set of tires on a gs450h (currently 225/50/17 alpin 6 about to start its 4th season - might replace early). Winters here are generally mild (Sofia, Bulgaria), but I do drive in conditions that sometimes form the worst kind of ice (a few below subzero + wet weather + road with basically no sunlight = smooth, slick... you know) - plus the hard ice at winter resort parkings, of course. Same day I can be driving on a highway (140kph) in 15+ degrees dry & sunny weather (say, going to the seaside or to Greece or anywhere southern and/or generally flat), which sounds like the perfect way to degrade winter tires (both compound and thread) - or am I perhaps worrying too much and should stick with winters? And yes, I do see snow regularly, but the snow performance of today's all-seasons seems almost indistinguishable from a non-X-Ice-type winter tires.

    #9665
    1. TyreReviews alespa archived

      I've only done ice traction and braking but it was broadly similar. Data out in next few weeks.

      #9672
      1. alespa TyreReviews archived

        ...and I guess I should've posted under the correct article. Not sure how I ended up here, I was looking at the "best 2024 all-seasons" one. Sorry and please move if you're able - my bad.

        #9675
  2. Mark archived

    I'd be very interested to know the relative effect of tyre wear. We all know that a 50% worn tyre does not perform as well as it did when it was new. What we dont know is how does a 50% worn premium tyre compare against a brand new budget tyre...?
    Maybe if you buy budget but change at 50% wear, you might be overall safer than if you buy premium but run it til it's not legal anymore, I don't know?
    A purist will buy premium AND change well within the limit but not all of us have the budget to do that, so I'd love to see some hard facts on the topic.
    thanks, Mark

    #9486
    1. TyreReviews Mark archived

      In aquaplaning you likely would be safer with two budget tyres, but in every other way I would rather be on the premium tyre.

      #9495
  3. Osama Bin Jinping archived

    all your tests are done at high speeds. i am interested in the slow speed dry/wet braking test. does that also translate to cars driven inside the city at slow speeds (30 to 40 km/h)?

    #9018
    1. TyreReviews Osama Bin Jinping archived

      Trends continue but naturally things are much closer as distances are shorter

      #9019
  4. Denis archived

    I would compare budget summer tyres with the European winter tyres, as this should be the case. Those who wants to save some money, they would not even change non-studded winter tyres. I'm working in tyre online store in Latvia, mostly this is the issue - most of the drivers does not see the benefit in switching tyres, European winter tyres are considered as All season tyres: www.jaunasriepas.lv

    #8910
    1. TyreReviews Filip archived

      lol, top gif.

      External noise is a factor, however tyre companies can direct the noise of the tyre with tread pattern design, meaning some companies can direct the noise into the wheel arch to get a better EU label score, but have worse internal noise. I don't think it makes a massive difference.

      Pitch is also another thing you notice a lot more inside which isn't recorded on the external noise tests.

      #8891
        1. TyreReviews Filip archived

          Ah thanks, that's a copy and paste issue on my part!

          #8893
  5. Jon archived

    Did you try putting 4 different budget tyres on the car - some part worn etc. The number of times while I've been waiting for a tyre change someone has come in and asked for a single tyre change with the cheapest replacement going.

    #8859
    1. TyreReviews Jon archived

      I've not done all 4 but there's a video on the channel comparing budgets on the rear and premium on front of an M2

      #8864
  6. TassieLorenzo archived

    Best thinking face emoji in video thumbnail yet! :D

    #8855
  7. juraj archived

    I would add another recent test, where they compare set of premium tyres vs set of budget brands (some maybe rather known midrange brands, not necessarily Asian unknown brands):
    https://autozurnal.com/test...

    I know it is in Slovak, but nowadays with google translate available... anyway, it is mostly about graphs and numbers :)

    Btw, the test also confirms CPC7's great wet road abilities. I think the test was done in cooperation with Czech car club, as they have the same results in different graphic design on their web.

    #8853
    1. TyreReviews juraj archived

      There's a bunch of similar tests on the site from this year, all very similar results. It's nice when tyre testers agree.

      Though you are correct, I wouldn't call any of those tyres budget at all, lowest is mid range / tier 2. This is a true budget test!

      #8854
      1. TyreReviews TyreReviews archived

        Sorry, I realised there was a page 2 with lots of budget tyres on too, but I realised that as I was taking off on a flight so just got around to replying now :)

        Thanks for the link!

        #8856
  8. David Hoffman archived

    Retreaded passenger car tires are sometimes good for slow moving low load vehicles that travel on dirt roads. Farm cars, hunting cars we call them. In the USA the last company to offer retail retreaded passenger car tires finally went out of business recently. They produced lots of junk tires that failed at highway speeds and were a nightmare to own. Their off road low speed low load tires performed much better.

    #8827
    1. TyreReviews David Hoffman archived

      Agreed! Truck and bus tires also often get re-treaded, but they're designed to be!

      #8832