Falken stops shorter in the wet and wins every shared test; Kumho fights back on ice.
The Falken EuroWinter HS01 and the Kumho WinterCraft WP51 occupy the same upper-middle winter tyre segment, but they have notably different personalities. Falken's offering is the broader, more rounded performer — it covers 185 sizes up to R21, earns strong marks in wet and aquaplaning conditions, and carries an impressive real-world reputation among owners. Kumho's WP51 is a narrower proposition in every sense: just 52 sizes up to R17, and a character skewed heavily toward frozen-surface grip at the expense of wet-road capability. Both have been superseded — the HS01 by the Falken EuroWinter HS02, the WP51 by the Kumho WinterCraft WP52 — but they remain widely available and worth understanding. Across five shared tests, the HS01 leads the head-to-head five wins to zero.
EuroWinter HS01
WinterCraft WP51


These tyres were not tested together. The comparison below is inferred from separate tests by normalizing both tyres against 39 shared benchmark tyres, so treat it as an estimate.
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51Dry performance is the one area where these two tyres are essentially level — both score in the low 70s and neither distinguishes itself as a handling tyre. The HS01 delivers what testers describe as safely understeering, predictable dynamics on dry tarmac: not exciting, but stable and confidence-inspiring. The WP51 is in the same ballpark on dry braking, averaging 72.8 against the HS01's 77.4 in measured test detail scores, though direct head-to-head dry braking data is limited. Neither tyre is for drivers who prioritise dry handling engagement — both are utility winter tyres where straight-line safety and composed cornering matter more than outright feel.
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51Wet performance is where the gap between these two tyres opens up most clearly. The HS01 averages 36.2m in wet braking across two measured tests; the WP51 averages 38.3m across the same two tests — a consistent 2.1-metre deficit that reflects a genuine difference in wet-road capability. The Falken's aquaplaning resistance is a particular strength, with longitudinal aquaplaning scores among the highest in its class and multiple testers singling out its exceptional aquaplaning reserves as a standout quality. Its EU wet grip label of predominantly B reinforces the story. The WP51, by contrast, carries a mostly C wet grip rating, and its wet braking score of 61.6 versus the HS01's 77.1 tells a clear tale. For drivers who regularly face rain-soaked roads, the HS01 is the considerably safer choice.
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51Snow and ice is where the Kumho WinterCraft WP51 closes the gap — and in some respects reverses it. Its overall snow score of 77.0 edges the HS01's 72.2, and its ice braking and handling scores in independent tests are genuinely strong: ice braking averaging 81.8 and snow braking at 85.0 in detailed assessments. In the two measured snow braking tests both tyres share, the difference is negligible — the HS01 averages 28.8m and the WP51 28.9m — suggesting that on packed snow, real-world stopping performance is nearly identical. The HS01 does have its own snow credentials: short snow braking distances and good safety reserves in tested conditions, though testers noted slower steering response and modest lateral traction on snow as persistent limitations. If your winters are dominated by ice and packed snow rather than rain and slush, the WP51's frozen-surface bias is worth noting.
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51The HS01 is the more comfortable and refined tyre of the two. Its comfort score of 75.6 versus the WP51's 69.9 tracks what real owners report — a tyre that rolls smoothly and doesn't intrude. Tyre Reviews owners, who rate it at 91/100 across 24 reviews, consistently mention low noise levels and composed everyday driving as positives, with one owner on a Renault Megane describing it as performing well across 10,000 miles of mixed use without complaints. The caveat testers flag is rolling resistance: both tyres score poorly here, but the HS01's very high rolling resistance — flagged across multiple test reports — translates to a real fuel economy penalty over time. The WP51 is similarly unimpressive on rolling resistance. Neither tyre is a friend to the fuel bill, but the HS01's comfort and refinement advantage makes it the easier tyre to live with day to day.
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51
Falken EuroWinter HS01
Kumho WinterCraft WP51For most drivers choosing between these two, the Falken EuroWinter HS01 is the stronger all-round winter tyre. It wins every shared test, stops shorter in the wet by a meaningful margin, handles mixed winter conditions with greater confidence, and has a well-documented real-world track record from hundreds of owners. Its 185-size range up to R21 also makes it relevant for a much wider range of vehicles. The Kumho WinterCraft WP51 has a more specific appeal: if your winters are genuinely cold and icy, and you drive a smaller car on up to R17 rims, its strong frozen-surface scores make it a reasonable choice at a budget-friendly price point. But its wet-road weakness is a real limitation for Central or Western European climates where rain is as common as snow. Note that both tyres have been replaced by newer generations — the HS02 and WP52 respectively — so check current availability before committing.
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