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Comparison: Continental UltraContact NXT vs. GoodYear Efficientgrip Performance 2 vs. GoodYear UltraGrip Performance+ vs. Bridgestone Blizzak 6 vs. GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3

These two premium summer tyres have very different personalities, and understanding that difference matters before you spend your money. The Continental UltraContact NXT is an outright performance tyre — sharp, safe, and built to dominate wet conditions. The Goodyear EfficientGrip Performance 2 is something else entirely: a pragmatic, long-lasting daily companion that prioritises economy over edge-of-the-envelope ability.



In the three tests where both tyres faced each other head-to-head, the Continental came out on top every time — including a win in the AutoMotorSport 2025 shootout where it finished first in a field of six while the Goodyear placed fifth. That gap in competitive ranking tells a story, but it doesn't tell the whole one.



Where the Continental truly earns its 99/100 rating is in wet conditions. Its wet braking score of 97 is exceptional — one of the highest figures you'll see on a summer tyre — and the dry handling score of 97.7 shows it's no slouch on a dry road either. Testers consistently describe the NXT's wet behaviour as confident and predictable, with short stopping distances and composed cornering. Its one acknowledged weakness is aquaplaning resistance, which scores 75.8 — notably lower than its other attributes. On a flooded road, the NXT needs a little more respect. Dry braking (86) also trails its wet braking score, which is unusual for a premium tyre — most tyres stop better on dry tarmac than wet. But this is really a case of the wet performance being exceptional rather than the dry being poor.



The EfficientGrip Performance 2, meanwhile, operates in a different league when it comes to longevity. ADAC measured approximately 57,800 km of tread life — a figure that earns a near-perfect mileage score of 99 and makes the Goodyear one of the longest-lasting premium summer tyres on the market. If you cover high annual mileage, that translates directly into money saved. Fuel efficiency is strong too, with a score of 93.5 on that measure. The Goodyear brand has always leaned into value, and the EfficientGrip Performance 2 makes that case convincingly.



But the Goodyear's safety performance is more mixed. Wet braking comes in at 84 — decent, but a significant step below the Continental's 97. Dry braking is 81.7. In real-world terms, in the conditions that matter most when something goes wrong, the Continental stops shorter. Test feedback repeatedly flags the EfficientGrip's tendency toward longer braking distances, particularly on dry roads, and notes that its dry handling dynamics feel less precise than the top tier. Wet grip feedback is similarly inconsistent — some tests praise its wet behaviour, while others highlight it as a weak point. That variation suggests the tyre's wet capability is size and condition dependent, rather than a universal strength.



On comfort and noise, the Continental is the clearer winner: its noise score of 91.3 and comfort of 90.5 make it genuinely pleasant to live with day to day, not just fast when you need it to be. The NXT's rolling resistance is also excellent, and it's built with 65% recycled materials — earning recognition for sustainability alongside its performance credentials.



The honest verdict is this: if safety and outright performance are your priority — particularly in the wet — the UltraContact NXT is the better tyre, and the data backs that up comprehensively. It's the tyre for drivers who want confidence, not just competence. The EfficientGrip Performance 2 makes more sense if you prioritise longevity, running costs, and don't push hard in adverse conditions. High-mileage drivers who want economy and a known-quantity tyre will find the Goodyear genuinely good value. Drivers who value safety margins and performance will want the Continental. Both are recommended — but they're built for different kinds of people.

Test Profile

Continental
UltraContact NXT
GoodYear
Efficientgrip Performance 2
GoodYear
UltraGrip Performance+
Bridgestone
Blizzak 6
GoodYear
UltraGrip Performance 3
Number of tests
3
4
23
14
24
Best position
#1
#2
#1
#1
#1
Average position
1.3
3.3
3.3
3.6
2.7
Latest test
2026
2026
2025
2025
2025
Available sizes
23
40
176
194
302

Dimensions and prices

Compare prices across all available dimensions for these tyres.

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