Goodyear wins on safety, comfort and quiet; Bridgestone wins only on fuel economy.
These two tyres both wear a premium badge, but they were built for different cars and, frankly, for different drivers. The Goodyear EfficientGrip 2 SUV is exactly what its name says: a dedicated SUV summer tyre, the successor to the GoodYear EfficientGrip SUV, engineered with stiffer construction and a tread pattern tuned for the higher loads, taller sidewalls and weight transfer of crossovers and 4x4s. It spans 44 dimensions across an R16 to R22 fitment range and is positioned by Goodyear as a comfortable, quiet, durability-leaning all-rounder. The Bridgestone Turanza 6, by contrast, is a touring car tyre, the replacement for the well-regarded Bridgestone Turanza T005. Launched in 2023 and offered in a huge 144 dimensions, it is Bridgestone's efficiency-first grand tourer, built around the new ENLITEN technology that promises lower weight, reduced rolling resistance and longer life.
That fitment difference matters and we will not gloss over it. If you run a genuine SUV, the Goodyear is the natural choice because its carcass and shoulder blocks are designed for the job. The Turanza 6 does cover the same R16 to R22 wheel range and many of its sizes suit crossovers and estates, but its design intent is the saloon and hatchback owner who values fuel economy and mileage above outright sportiness.
The single biggest difference in character is priorities. The EfficientGrip 2 SUV chases balance and safety margins, earning our 92/100 and a strong 93/100 owner average. The Turanza 6 chases the EU label and the fuel pump, scoring a class-leading rolling resistance but landing at 78/100 from us and a sobering 62/100 from owners. One is a confident generalist, the other is an efficiency specialist that asks you to forgive softer dynamics.
Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Turanza 6


Averaged from 2 tests
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6Wet braking again favours the Goodyear, whose average sits near 86.3 on our scale against the Bridgestone's 76.8, a meaningful margin that owners feel as confidence in standing water. The EfficientGrip 2 SUV was crowned the best tyre for wet driving in Motor 2026 (a perfect 25.0 of 25 points, first place) and is repeatedly cited for short wet braking distances and strong aquaplaning reserves. Its aquaplaning score of 81.8 and wet handling detail of 88.3 are genuinely high-end numbers.
The Bridgestone is not poor in the wet so much as underwhelming for its class. It earns a solid environmental and wet rating from ADAC and good longitudinal aquaplaning resistance in Motor 2026 (19.9 of 20), but the moment lateral grip and pace matter it falls back. Tyre Reviews recorded a wet handling lap of 72.65 seconds against a 67.70 second benchmark, a five-second deficit that is enormous, and noted it simply did not have the expected bite. Multiple labs flagged indifferent, understeering wet handling.
So in heavy rain and quick cornering the Goodyear is the safer companion by a clear margin: it resists aquaplaning well, brakes shorter and turns in with more assurance. The Bridgestone covers the straight-line basics competently but asks for restraint when the bends get wet and fast.
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6On dry braking the picture is clear. Across the measured tests the Goodyear posts an average stopping distance that translates into roughly 36.3 metres in the Polish Motor 2026 trial, while the Bridgestone returns figures in the 37.45 metre region in independent measurement. That gap of around a metre or more sounds trivial, but from 100 km/h it is the better part of a car length, the difference between stopping behind the vehicle ahead and arriving in its boot. Interestingly, the Goodyear's dry braking was actually its weakest discipline in one Polish test (sixth of eight), so neither tyre is a dry-braking standout, but the Goodyear's broader dry score of 84.1 still clears the Bridgestone's 78.4 comfortably.
In handling the two diverge by philosophy. The Goodyear earns praise across German and Polish testing for harmonious, balanced dry handling (detail score 86) with secure reserves and predictable behaviour at the limit, the hallmark of a tyre that does not surprise you. Its one acknowledged dry weakness is steering that is less sharp than the keenest rivals, a deliberate trade for comfort. The Bridgestone is the more curious case: its dry steering reaction (84) and measured handling (82.5) read well on paper thanks to ENLITEN's lighter structure, yet testers repeatedly noted understeer and described the dry performance as merely average, with AvD and ADAC both marking down its dry handling and braking.
Why is the Goodyear stronger overall? It was simply tuned for grip balance and stability under the loads it expects, and the data confirms it. The Bridgestone's lightweight, low-resistance construction shaves rolling drag superbly but costs ultimate bite and front-end conviction, so when you push it hard the nose washes wide before the rear has anything to say.
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6Comfort is where the Goodyear pulls furthest ahead, and the numbers are emphatic. It scores 92.3 for comfort and a near-perfect 96.9 for noise, against the Bridgestone's 70.9 and 66.3. Testers and owners agree: one driver on a Peugeot 3008 called it incredibly comfortable with very successful road absorption, another praised how quiet it is, and German testing consistently lists high rolling comfort among its strengths. This is a tyre that genuinely hushes the cabin.
The Bridgestone's comfort story is more divided. It won the comfort category outright in AvD 2026 (4.5) and Die Reifentester named it the quietest interior among the summer tyres on test, and one owner noted a soft sidewall that aids ride. Yet our aggregate noise figure of 66.3 is low, suggesting exterior and real-world noise are less impressive than the best lab interior results, and owner sentiment is mixed at best.
On running costs the roles reverse and this is the Turanza 6's whole reason for being. Its rolling resistance score of 91.9 is class-leading, confirmed by a measured 6.32 kg/t that Tyre Reviews found a clear 10 percent ahead of the next best tyre, tied with Michelin at the very top. The EU fuel label backs this: 31 percent of its sizes rate A for fuel economy versus just 9 percent of the Goodyear's, which leans B and C. ENLITEN delivers on its efficiency promise. The Goodyear's rolling resistance (78) is respectable but clearly behind. Mileage flips again toward Goodyear (96 versus 81.8), and owners report excellent wear, one noting better longevity than the Conti SportContact tyres he replaced, though another suffered a catastrophic puncture early, a reminder that no tyre is immune. On the EU wet grip label the Goodyear is outstanding, with 98 percent of sizes rated A against the Bridgestone's 77 percent. The Goodyear carries a higher price (around 603 zl versus 556 zl in Polish testing), but with stronger mileage, safety and comfort it returns more value over its life unless your annual fuel bill dominates everything.
Goodyear Efficientgrip 2 SUV
Bridgestone Turanza 6This is a clearer contest than the shared premium label suggests. If you drive an SUV or crossover and want the best blend of safety, comfort and longevity, buy the Goodyear EfficientGrip 2 SUV. It brakes shorter on both surfaces, resists aquaplaning better, turns in with more composure and is dramatically quieter and more comfortable, all while delivering excellent mileage. The trade-offs are a higher purchase price and steering that prioritises calm over sharpness, but for the family-SUV owner clocking motorway and mixed miles, those are easy concessions. Our 92/100 and the 93/100 owner average are well earned.
The Bridgestone Turanza 6 is a more conditional recommendation. It makes sense for the high-mileage touring driver who measures everything in litres per 100 km: its class-leading rolling resistance and strong A-rated fuel label will genuinely cut running costs, and its mileage and longitudinal aquaplaning are sound. But you accept softer dry and wet handling, understeer when pushed, and comfort that tests well in the lab yet underwhelms many owners (a 62/100 owner average is a warning).
Our honest steer: in any cool, wet European climate where safety margins matter, the Goodyear is the buy, and it is the only sensible choice if your vehicle is a true SUV. Choose the Bridgestone only if it is meaningfully cheaper at the till, you cover big efficient touring miles in a saloon or estate, and fuel economy outranks ultimate grip on your list.
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