One could argue that automakers are responsible for making roads more dangerous聽during the winter. By putting their vast marketing budgets behind the promotion of all-wheel drive as a safety feature, they鈥檙e hiding the one thing that actually makes it safer to drive on snow and ice, and even on dry roads, in cold temperatures: a good set of winter tires. It鈥檚 tires, not which wheels on your car are driven, that matter this winter.聽
鈥淣o doubt, an AWD vehicle on decent all-season tires will get moving pretty well,鈥 explains Woody Rogers. He鈥檚 the head of testing team, so he has evaluated virtually every tire there is, in a variety of conditions. 鈥淏ut with AWD, you can get moving easily enough that you can overestimate your ability to stop and turn. Every vehicle uses the same four contact patches to stop and turn. AWD is not a benefit there.鈥
The all-season tires that come standard on most vehicles (including all-wheel drives) should, despite their name, be thought of only as a compromised three-season option, at best. They may be adequate in mild temperatures, but their ability to provide any grip at all falls off as temperatures drop, and they鈥檙e not equipped to provide grip on snow and ice. What follows is a broad explanation of how winter tires differ from “all-season” ones.聽
Modern Winter Tires Were First Developed in聽Japan, in the聽Early 鈥90s
鈥淭he air quality in Japan was falling off during winter months due to studded tires chipping away at bare pavement, creating airborne dust,鈥 says Rogers.聽
Studded tires are primarily designed to boost traction on ice, where the sharp steel studs dig into the surface to find grip. Studs don鈥檛 really help on snow聽and can actually reduce traction in slush or rain, and damage bare pavement. Drivers can鈥檛 dictate the surfaces they drive on, they just need a tire that works across all the hazardous conditions they face in winter months.聽
鈥淪o, Bridgestone [a Japanese tire maker] set about developing a聽studless聽winter tire,鈥 continues Rogers. 鈥淭hey wanted to create a tire that wouldn鈥檛 just work in the snow, but on ice,聽too.鈥澛

They're Made from a Specialized聽Rubber Compound
鈥淵ou can think of an all-season tire like a candy bar,鈥 says Rogers. 鈥淎t room temperature, it鈥檚 nice and gooey and tastes great. But, put it in the freezer for an hour and you can shatter the thing. The rubber in your tires will do the same thing at extreme temperatures.鈥
鈥淔lexibility determines your tire鈥檚 traction,鈥 he continues. 鈥淪omewhere in the 40- to 45-degree range is where we begin to see all-season tires lose traction. The rubber becomes very stiff; it can鈥檛 conform to the texture of the pavement, and stops providing traction.鈥
Winter tires are made from a different rubber compound than all-season tires. Where an all-season works optimally from about 45 degrees, up to 100 or so, a winter tire is made from a compound designed to work best below that 45-degree point. (They actually grip fine in warmer temperatures, they just wear out very quickly.)聽By remaining flexible at low temperatures, a winter tire is able to provide safe levels of grip, even on dry pavement.聽
Like a Merino Baselayer, Winter Tires Wick Moisture
鈥淎 big mechanical problem with tire traction on ice is that, as your vehicle rolls across it, the weight and friction in your contact patch melts a very thin film of water in the moment that it鈥檚 underneath the tire,鈥 describes Rogers. 鈥淵ou have a lubricant over an already slippery surface, so your tire isn't even completely in contact with the ice.鈥
Conditions also change rapidly聽during the winter. Snow can turn to slush, or ice in an instant. And even what looks like dry pavement can be covered with patches of invisible black ice. It鈥檚 the winter tire鈥檚 job to provide drivers with predictability and grip throughout all that.聽
How? 鈥淏ridgestone鈥檚 big innovation was that they developed something called a multi-cell rubber compound聽that鈥檚 actually slightly porous,” says Rogers.聽“It works a lot like the technical fabrics in your outdoors gear, wicking moisture away from the surface. The multi-cell compound has empty, void space at a slightly-larger-than-molecular level.聽It gives the moisture somewhere to go temporarily, putting the rubber in contact with the texture of the ice surface.鈥
By allowing the tire to interact with the ice directly, it鈥檚 able to achieve grip. Other tire brands have adopted the technology as well, and聽it鈥檚 a big part of what makes the studless winter tire such聽great performers.聽
Their Tread聽Grips Much Better聽
Looking at a winter tire next to an all-season, it鈥檚 immediately obvious that the former has a much deeper, more open tread pattern聽that鈥檚 covered in small squiggly grooves. These add additional edges to help the tire find more traction. 鈥淭hese additional edges聽are called sipes,鈥 explains Rogers. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e biting edges that provide the traction once the tire is in contact with the surface.鈥澛
The zig-zag pattern of the sipes makes them multi-directional. They add bite both front-and-rear, and side-to-side. Because they鈥檙e smaller and more flexible than the聽main tread pattern, they鈥檙e able to聽mechanically key with smaller imperfections in the surface you鈥檙e driving across. Think rough ice, or the grittiness in a paved surface.聽
Of course, the larger, deeper tread provides mechanical traction too, while also better clearing water and slush. 鈥淭hat way you take big bites out of the snow, rather than just nibbling at it,鈥 says Rogers.聽

Winter Tires Can Actually Save You Money
A set of winter tires is going to cost you $500 to $800, or more, depending on your vehicle. You鈥檒l also need to pay a shop to fit and remove them every November and April or invest in a second set of wheels to permanently mount them to. Sound expensive? In all likelihood, they鈥檒l actually save you money.聽
鈥淢ost insurance deductibles are $500,鈥 say Rogers. 鈥淚f they save you just one little bump in traffic, you鈥檝e paid for most of your winter tires.鈥
They鈥檒l also extend the life of the tires you run the rest of the year. 鈥淪tatistics say you鈥檒l own your vehicle about six years,” says Rogers. “And, in that time, you鈥檒l go through two sets of tires. By buying winter tires, you move forward the cost of that replacement. You can easily stretch six years and five winters out of that combination, with no significant additional expense.鈥澛
But where do you store those tires that aren鈥檛 on your vehicle? 鈥淚f you stack them up in a corner, they鈥檙e less than 30 by 30 inches,鈥 explains Rogers. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 smaller than a couple boxes of my stuff from high school.鈥
And because you鈥檝e now learned that it鈥檚 tires, not AWD that聽you need to drive safely in winter weather, you can also now save money by buying a cheaper car. On models where AWD is offered as an option, it typically comes at a $1,000 to $1,500 premium. Spend that on tires instead, and you鈥檒l have a car that stops and turns as well as it accelerates.聽
Which Winter Tires Are Right for You?
The short answer: Any of them. 鈥淓ven an average winter tire is going to be better on snow and ice than the best all-season tire can ever hope to be,鈥 says Rogers. Literally any studless winter tire will improve your ability to drive in the winter.聽
He鈥檚 frank about what a challenge it is to convince people they need to invest in winter tires. You can explain that all-seasons stop working below 40 degrees. You can explain that you need winter tires in order to stop and turn on snow and ice. Countless web videos demonstrate that, on snow and ice, an AWD car on all-seasons can鈥檛 out-accelerate a rear-wheel drive car on winter tires. But until people try them, they just don鈥檛 understand what a night and day difference we鈥檙e really talking about here.聽Rogers also notes one other finding from his decades of experience: 鈥淲e know once a customer tries winter tires in real winter conditions, they鈥檙e never going to go back.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檙e all better off if we have good traction,鈥 Rogers concludes. 鈥淎s I drive around on appropriate tires, I don鈥檛 have to worry about what I can drive through, I have to worry about the people around me. The people behind me who can鈥檛 stop; the people who can鈥檛 steer to avoid a hazard. Please, Mr. and Mrs. Reader, do the rest of us a favor and be on winter tires.鈥