Are Cheap Tires Worth It? The Data Behind the Price Tags
We analysed 104 tire tests comparing Premium, Mid-Range and Budget tires. See how braking distance, handling, and wear differ by price category.
Table of Contents
- On-Road Reality Check
- How Do Cheap Tires Rank in Tests?
- Safety: The Hidden Cost of Cheap Tires
- Winter Performance: Snow & Ice Grip
- Do Cheap Tires Cost More Long-Term?
- Environmental Impact
- Comfort & Noise: Can You Feel the Difference?
- What Do Real Drivers Think?
- The Verdict
- How We Analysed the Data
- Frequently Asked Questions
We analysed 104 independent tire tests covering 1,160 individual results to answer one of the most common questions drivers ask: are cheap tires really worth the saving? Every test in our dataset directly compares Premium, Mid-Range, Economy and Budget tires under identical conditions — same car, same day, same track.
The results are striking. Premium tires win 81% of all tests and finish in the top three 75% of the time. Most critically, across 39 head-to-head wet braking comparisons, budget tires needed an average of 4.6m more to stop — a gap that, at motorway speeds, could mean the difference between a near-miss and a collision.
Below, we break down the numbers across braking, handling, aquaplaning, fuel efficiency, comfort, and real-world owner satisfaction — so you can see exactly where the money goes and make an informed decision.
On-Road Reality Check
Charts show the gap. This section lets you feel it. Move the speed slider and watch how the same test averages play out in a sudden wet-road braking moment.
Imagine brake lights appearing suddenly ahead on a wet motorway.
Model assumption: braking distance scales with speed squared, while preserving the measured Premium vs Budget ratio.
When premium tires have already stopped, budget tires are still carrying:
Budget tires are still moving at 24.2 km/h (15.0 mph).
At 80 km/h in the wet, premium tires stop in about 45.7m while budget tires need 50.3m. That is roughly 4.6m (1.0 car lengths) of extra travel.
Derived from 39 head-to-head Premium vs Budget wet-braking comparisons in this dataset.
How Do Cheap Tires Rank in Tests?
Premium tires average position 4 and win 80.5% of all tests. Budget tires average position 17.5, accounting for just 0% of test wins. Mid-range tires sit at position 8.1 with 23.2% of all top-3 finishes.
In this dataset, Premium is 4.0 versus Budget at 17.5, a 13.5 advantage for Premium.
In this dataset, Premium is 80.5% versus Budget at 0.0%, a 80.5 percentage points advantage for Premium.
In this dataset, Premium is 75.0% versus Budget at 0.0%, a 75.0 percentage points advantage for Premium.
Safety: The Hidden Cost of Cheap Tires
Across 39 direct comparisons, budget tires needed 4.6m more to stop in the wet — roughly 1.0 car lengths at highway speed. In wet handling, premium tires score 17 percentile points higher on average, meaning more predictable grip when it matters most.
In 39 head-to-head tests, premium tires stopped in an average of 45.7m while budget tires needed 50.3m — a difference of 4.6m.
Braking distance is measured from a set speed until the car stops completely. In wet conditions, tire performance varies dramatically — the compound, tread pattern, and siping all affect how effectively water is dispersed. Every extra metre of stopping distance at motorway speeds represents roughly 0.1 seconds of travel time where you have no control. In this dataset, premium tires average 45.7m in wet braking versus 50.3m for budget, a 4.6m difference.
Dry braking distances are usually closer across price tiers because total available grip is higher on dry tarmac. Even so, small gaps still matter in emergency stops. Here, premium averages 40.6m and budget 42.3m in dry braking, a 1.7m difference. As expected, the dry gap (1.7m) is tighter than the wet gap (4.6m).
Wet handling measures how predictable and controllable a tire is through corners on a wet track. Higher-scoring tires give the driver more warning before losing grip, making emergency manoeuvres safer. This is one of the categories where premium compounds show the largest advantage. In this dataset, Premium is 68.2/100 versus Budget at 51.0/100, a 17.2 points advantage for Premium.
Aquaplaning occurs when a layer of water builds up between the tire and road surface, causing total loss of grip. The speed shown is the point at which the tire begins to aquaplane — higher is safer. Good tread design channels water away faster, keeping rubber in contact with tarmac at higher speeds. In this dataset, Premium is 79.5 km/h versus Budget at 78.8 km/h, a 0.7 km/h advantage for Premium.
Curved aquaplaning tests how well a tire keeps lateral grip while cornering through standing water. It captures a dangerous real-world scenario: entering a bend where water depth suddenly increases. In this dataset, premium scores 63.6/100 versus 34.9/100 for budget, a 28.7-point advantage.
Winter Performance: Snow & Ice Grip
Winter conditions expose the biggest differences between tire price tiers. Compound flexibility, siping density, and tread design all affect how well a tire grips on snow and ice — and budget tires typically use harder compounds that struggle below 7°C.
Winter performance is critical for anyone driving in cold climates. Snow and ice braking tests measure stopping distance on packed snow and ice surfaces. Budget tires often use harder rubber compounds that lose flexibility below 7°C, resulting in significantly longer stopping distances when temperatures drop. In this dataset, Premium is 24.9m versus Budget at 32.2m, a 7.3m advantage for Premium.
Ice braking is one of the harshest safety tests because available grip is extremely low, so differences in compound and tread bite show up quickly. In this dataset, Premium is 17.6m versus Budget at 17.0m, a 0.6m advantage for Budget.
Snow handling tests measure how controllable and predictable a tire is on snow-covered roads. Professional drivers assess lateral grip, steering response, and stability through corners. Premium tires typically use softer winter compounds with more siping, giving them a significant advantage in these conditions. In this dataset, Premium is 69.3/100 versus Budget at 53.9/100, a 15.4 points advantage for Premium.
Snow traction measures a tire’s ability to accelerate and maintain grip on packed snow. This is critical for hill starts, junctions, and overtaking on winter roads. Tires with deeper sipes and softer rubber compounds disperse snow more effectively, maintaining contact with the road surface. In this dataset, Premium is 73.3/100 versus Budget at 53.5/100, a 19.8 points advantage for Premium.
Ice traction captures straight-line grip when accelerating on ice, where compound flexibility and siping design are critical. In this dataset, Premium is 61.9/100 versus Budget at 85.2/100, a 23.3 points advantage for Budget.
Winter and all-season tires use silica-rich compounds that stay flexible in cold temperatures, while summer and budget tires often harden below 7°C. This loss of flexibility directly reduces grip on snow and ice. The scores shown are normalised percentiles — each tire is scored within its own test, then averaged across all tests, accounting for the different measurement units used by different test organisations.
Do Cheap Tires Cost More Long-Term?
Premium tires score 18 points higher for rolling resistance, which translates to lower fuel consumption over the life of the tire. Premium tires also tend to last longer, scoring 51 vs 21 on wear performance. For overall value (combining price, wear, and fuel efficiency), Economy tires score highest at 52.
Tire wear tests measure how many kilometres a tire lasts under standardised conditions. Premium tires average 49,473 km before replacement compared to 34,757 km for budget — a difference of 14,716 km. When factoring in the cost per kilometre driven, a premium tire that lasts significantly longer may actually work out cheaper. In this dataset, Premium is 49,473 km versus Budget at 34,757 km, a 14,716 km advantage for Premium.
The cost-per-1000km metric combines purchase price with wear test data to calculate how much each kilometre actually costs. This accounts for the fact that a more expensive tire that lasts twice as long may actually be cheaper to run. It’s one of the most revealing metrics in our dataset. In this dataset, Premium is 7.90 €/1000km versus Budget at 4.60 €/1000km, a 3.30 €/1000km advantage for Budget.
In 1 of 3 tests, budget tires were actually more expensive per kilometre than premium — their lower purchase price couldn’t offset significantly worse wear.
Environmental Impact
Tires are a major source of microplastic pollution — tire wear particles account for up to 28% of microplastics entering waterways. Rolling resistance also directly affects fuel consumption and CO₂ emissions. Here’s how the price tiers compare on environmental impact.
Abrasion tests measure how much material a tire sheds as it wears. Different test organisations use different units (g/1000km, mg/km/t, mm/1000km), so we show normalised percentile scores rather than raw values. Lower abrasion means fewer tire-wear particles entering the environment. ADAC and AutoBild are among the test organisations that now routinely measure tire particulate emissions. In this dataset, Premium is 70.6/100 versus Budget at 52.8/100, a 17.8 points advantage for Premium.
Rolling resistance directly affects fuel consumption and CO₂ emissions. A tire with 7.8 kg/t rolling resistance uses measurably less fuel than one at 8.1 kg/t. Over 20,000 km, the difference adds up to several tanks of fuel and a meaningful reduction in carbon emissions. In this dataset, Premium is 7.8 kg/t versus Budget at 8.1 kg/t, a 0.3 kg/t advantage for Premium.
Comfort & Noise: Can You Feel the Difference?
Beyond outright performance, tires have a huge impact on how your car feels to drive every day. Road noise, ride comfort, and vibration filtering vary significantly between price tiers — and these are the things you notice on every journey.
Pass-by noise is measured in decibels (dB) under standardised conditions. The differences here are small — 71.4 dB for premium vs 71.5 dB for budget — but the decibel scale is logarithmic, so even a 1 dB difference is noticeable inside the cabin. The real comfort gap shows up in subjective testing below. In this dataset, Premium is 71.4 dB versus Budget at 71.5 dB, a 0.1 dB advantage for Premium.
Subjective scores are awarded by professional test drivers who assess real-world ride quality — how the tire absorbs bumps, filters vibrations, and how quiet it feels inside the car. These scores often reveal differences that lab measurements miss. In this dataset, Premium is 64.4/100 versus Budget at 23.6/100, a 40.8 points advantage for Premium.
Subjective noise ratings are judged by professional drivers and capture how intrusive the sound feels inside the cabin, including pitch and tone. A tire with lower measured dB can still feel harsher if it has a high-frequency whine. Here, premium scores 59.7/100 vs budget at 0.0/100 on subjective noise, while measured pass-by noise is relatively close at 71.4 dB vs 71.5 dB. This is why subjective noise scoring is often treated as the gold standard for perceived cabin comfort.
What Do Real Drivers Think?
Based on 4,580 owner reviews, premium tires score 7.3/10 on the \"would buy again\" question vs budget tires at 6.5/10. The biggest gap reported by drivers is in wet grip: premium owners rate it 8/10 compared to 6.7/10 for budget. Mid-range tires score well across all categories, with owners rating them 7.5/10 for buy-again satisfaction from 1,622 reviews.
In this dataset, Premium is 7.3/10 versus Budget at 6.5/10, a 0.8 points advantage for Premium.
In owner reviews, Premium is 8.0/10 versus Budget at 6.7/10, a 1.3 points advantage for Premium.
In owner reviews, Premium is 8.4/10 versus Budget at 7.6/10, a 0.8 points advantage for Premium.
In owner reviews, Premium is 7.9/10 versus Budget at 7.0/10, a 0.9 points advantage for Premium.
In owner reviews, Premium is 7.6/10 versus Budget at 6.8/10, a 0.8 points advantage for Premium.
The Verdict
After analysing all the data, three clear conclusions emerge. Premium tires lead on safety, mid-range tires offer the best overall value, and the cheapest budget tires are a false economy for most drivers. Here’s the breakdown.
Safety
When it comes to safety, the data is clear: premium tires stop 4.6m shorter in the wet. In an emergency, that distance can be the difference between a near-miss and a collision. Wet handling shows a similar pattern, with premium tires scoring 17 percentile points higher — meaning more predictable grip and safer cornering on wet roads. In winter conditions, the gap widens further: snow and ice performance testing reveals that budget compounds lose significant grip below 7°C.
Best Value
Mid-range tires offer the best compromise: averaging position 8.1 with 23.2% of all top-3 finishes. They deliver most of the safety performance of premium tires at a lower price point. Our cost-per-kilometre analysis found that in 1 of 3 tests, budget tires were actually more expensive to run than premium — their lower purchase price couldn’t offset significantly worse wear. For most drivers, mid-range tires are the sweet spot — close to premium safety performance without the premium price tag.
The Bottom Line
Premium tires take 80.5% of all test wins vs budget’s 0%. If safety is your priority, avoid the cheapest options. If you’re on a budget, mid-range tires offer the best balance of safety and value. If you’re on a tight budget, steer clear of the very cheapest options and look at mid-range instead — they’re the floor for acceptable performance. This analysis is based on 104 independent tests covering 1,160 tire results.
How We Analysed the Data
Show methodology details
This analysis is based on 104 independent tire tests covering 1,160 individual tire results. Every test included at least two different brand categories (Premium, Mid-Range, Economy, or Budget) to allow direct, fair comparisons under identical conditions.
Test Selection
We only include tests where tires from multiple price categories were tested together on the same vehicle, on the same day, at the same facility. This eliminates variables like weather, road surface, and vehicle condition that would make cross-test comparisons unreliable.
How Scores Are Calculated
For each metric, we average the raw measured values across all tests for each brand category. For example, the wet braking figure shown is the mean stopping distance of all Premium tires across every included test, compared to the mean for Budget tires. This gives a clear, real-world picture of performance differences using actual units — metres, km/h, kg/t, and decibels — rather than abstract scores.
Brand Categories
Each tire brand is classified as Premium, Mid-Range, Economy, or Budget based on the manufacturer’s market positioning and typical price point. These classifications are consistent across all tests and are assigned independently of test results.
Continuous Updates
This page is automatically regenerated whenever new test results are published. As more data is added, the averages become increasingly reliable. Seasonal filters allow you to view results specifically for summer, winter, or all-season tires, since performance characteristics differ significantly between tire types.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are cheap tires safe?
Budget tires are legal and meet minimum safety standards, but our data from 39 tests shows they consistently underperform premium tires in critical areas. Budget tires need an average of 4.6m more to stop in wet conditions. For urban driving at low speeds the difference may be acceptable, but at motorway speeds it becomes a significant safety concern.
Do premium tires last longer?
Our data shows premium tires generally score higher on wear tests, but the difference varies. Some mid-range and economy tires offer competitive longevity. The real long-term cost depends on combining wear life with fuel efficiency, where premium tires typically excel thanks to lower rolling resistance.
What is the best value tire category?
Mid-range tires offer the best overall value. They finish in the top 3 in 23.2% of tests, deliver close-to-premium safety performance, and cost significantly less. Economy tires can also be good value for lower-mileage drivers who do mostly urban driving.
How much difference do tires really make?
Tires are the only part of your car touching the road, and our data shows dramatic differences between categories. Premium tires win 80.5% of all tests compared to budget tires at just 0%. In wet braking alone, the average gap is 4.6m, which at 80 km/h could be the difference between stopping safely and a collision.
Are mid-range tires worth it?
Absolutely. Mid-range tires are the sweet spot for most drivers. They deliver the majority of premium-level safety performance at a lower price, and finish in the top 3 in 23.2% of tests. Unless you drive a high-performance car or do very high mileage, mid-range is often the smartest choice.