If you're going to carry on riding outside through winter, then the cold and wet conditions are best handled with something heavier, grippier and more puncture-resistant than your summer rubber. You'll need a set of the best winter road bike tyres you can afford, and this guide offers plenty of durably options to choose from.
Best winter road bike tyre overall: Schwalbe Marathon Plus Tyre
Best winter road bike tyre for puncture resistance: Bontrager R3 Hard-Case Lite TLR tyre
Best all-weather winter road bike tyre: Continental Grand Prix 4 Season
Best winter road bike tyre for reliability: Goodyear Vector 4Seasons tubeless tyre
Most durable winter road bike tyre: Hutchinson Challenger TLR tyres
Compared to standard road bike tyres, winter tyres are typically wider, with thicker tread and beefier puncture-prevention under that tread, and usually a bit cheaper — nobody likes trashing expensive tyres. Fixing a flat in the cold and wet is a miserable job, so it makes sense to use tyres with better puncture resistance to avoid it.
Fortunately, when it comes to winter road bike tyres, there are plenty of great options out there to prevent your rolling resistance from adding to winter sluggishness.
A set of gravel tyres is an alternative option to help you to find more grip and comfort (if your bike has the tyre clearance for them), staying rubber-side-down in the wet, and offering increased puncture resistance with a grippier tread.
If you're sticking with road tyres though, then here are some of our very favourites!
How we review tyres
As with everything we review here at road.cc, reviewing tyres takes time. This is why our experienced reviewers ride with any test tyres for at least a month before submitting their verdicts. The tyres are put through various riding conditions and scenarios, assessing factors such as the durability, puncture-proofness, construction quality and value. We believe that this comprehensive evaluation provides valuable insights into whether the tyres live up to their marketing claims in everyday riding conditions.
It’s important to note that our reviews aren't based on lab tests, so we don’t have access to specialist equipment like the folks at Bicycle Rolling Resistance or Wheel Energy. While scientific data is valuable, we believe our observations into ride quality, grip, puncture protection, and even how easy they are to get on or off, offer useful perspectives as well.
Why you can trust us
Our reviewers are all experienced cyclists, and so are the road.cc team members who put these guides together, which means you can be sure the product selections are our genuine top picks, not just a round-up of things we can make a commission from.
When it comes to road.cc buyer's guides, we will only ever recommend products that fared well in reviews. All of the tyres featured here scored 4 out of 5 stars or more overall from our reviewers, indicating very good, excellent or exceptional quality according to our reviewers' opinions.
With all that said, it's time for our top winter road bike tyre picks.
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35 comments
Therein lies your problem, you see, you should have used washing up liquid: tea, however strong, won't help.
Having spent an hour on the roadside fixing another puncture with Spec's Roubaix Pros, brings it to 4 in total in about 6 weeks, I've formed the opinion they're absolutely flipping useless on wet winter roads round where I live.
Having had multiple punctures with supposedly reliable tubeless road tyres (like Pirelli Cinturato and Hutchinson fusion 5 performance) I ended up getting armadillos - and they've been a revelation in winter on the rough Teesside roads. Can't recommend them enough.
Agree that the Fusion Performance were a little thin for the UK (they do tougher versions), but you were unlucky with the Cinturatos. I found them to be bulletproof tyres, I used to joke that they wouldn't be out of place on a Transit van rather than a bike.
Ive dropped 'down' a protection layer to the P Zero Race TLR for this winter season, a lot more lively than the Cinturatos. Time will tell if they have the toughness, but all good so far.
I'm also a big fan of the Cinturato, brilliant tyre in every respect that matters to an older, slower rider who uses them in all weathers and detests punctures. They may be a little lardy, but are featherweight compared with Marathons, and they roll surprisingly briskly.
My first pair lasted 2 years and very nearly 10,000 miles, which is way more than Pirelli advertise. It was only towards the end of their life, when most of the tread had vanished, that I had my first flat. I wasted no time ordering my new pair and although the £95 price was a bit salty I unreservedly recommended them to anyone who can't be doing with punctures and can't bear the thought of super heavy rubber weighing down their bike.
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