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Comparison: Fulda Kristall Control HP2 vs. Semperit Speed-Grip 5 vs. GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3 vs. Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5

Semperit wins in the wet and dry; Fulda is the dedicated snow specialist.

The Fulda Kristall Control HP2 and the Semperit Speed-Grip 5 are both budget-segment winter tyres, but they arrive at very different conclusions about what a winter tyre should do. The Fulda is built around snow and ice capability — a tyre whose strongest scores cluster around cold-surface grip, ice lateral guidance and aquaplaning resistance, at the cost of some meaningful compromises in wet and dry conditions. The Semperit, developed within the Continental group and the successor to the well-regarded Speed-Grip 3, takes a more balanced approach: it is a genuinely all-round winter performer that handles wet roads with notable assurance and brings strong efficiency credentials. In six shared comparative tests, the Speed-Grip 5 has come out ahead five times to the Kristall Control HP2's one — a clear verdict, though the two are closer on snow than that record suggests.

Fulda Kristall Control HP2
Good for
Drivers in regions with heavy or frequent snowfall Budget buyers prioritising cold-surface grip Drivers seeking strong ice and snow traction Low-mileage second-car winter fitments
Not ideal for
Drivers frequently on wet or rainy winter roads Those needing confident dry-road braking Motorway commuters sensitive to cabin noise
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
Good for
Everyday drivers in mixed winter conditions Drivers prioritising wet-road safety Fuel-conscious commuters wanting low rolling resistance Drivers upgrading from Semperit Speed-Grip 3
Not ideal for
Drivers in extreme snow or ice-dominant climates Those wanting the highest outright snow lateral grip Drivers prioritising maximum tread longevity

Test Profile

Fulda
Kristall Control HP2
Semperit
Speed-Grip 5
GoodYear
UltraGrip Performance 3
Michelin
PILOT ALPIN 5
Number of tests
25
12
24
21
Best position
#2
#3
#1
#1
Average position
12.4
9.3
2.7
1.7
Latest test
2025
2025
2025
2025
Available sizes
55
93
302
135

These tyres were not tested together in the same test. The scores below are aggregated from different independent tests, so direct comparison should be taken with caution.

Wet
Confidence
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
66%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
70%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
84%
Aquaplaning - longitudal
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
72%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
73%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
87%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
65%
Wet braking
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
64%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
66%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
86%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
71%
Aquaplaning - cross
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
84%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
75%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
80%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
54%
Wet circle cornering
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
64%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
70%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
85%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
67%
Wet handling
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
61%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
70%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
98%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
84%

This is where the gap between the two becomes most consequential. Across two measured wet braking tests, the Semperit Speed-Grip 5 averages 36.4m against the Kristall Control HP2's 38m — a 1.6m difference that is significant at real-world speeds and consistent across test sizes. In the AutoBild 2024 205/55 R16 braking shoot-out, those margins were 36.8m versus 38.6m respectively, with the Speed-Grip finishing sixth out of 55 tyres while the Fulda placed 20th. The Semperit has been commended by independent testers for safe, precise wet-road behaviour across multiple years of testing, and its wet handling score of 70.2 leads the Fulda's 65.5. The Fulda struggles more: wet grip and handling deficits have been consistently noted, with reduced lateral guidance on wet surfaces a recurring criticism. Real owners confirm this — one user praised wet grip as good in snow conditions but highlighted that ice braking and grip were areas of concern. For drivers in climates that deliver regular rain alongside cold temperatures, the Semperit's wet-weather assurance is a genuine safety differentiator.

Snow
Confidence
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
82%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
75%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
76%
Snow traction
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
83%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
69%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
91%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
97%
Snow braking
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
84%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
75%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
93%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
90%
Snow cornering
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
78%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
73%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
81%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
94%
Snow handling
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
71%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
79%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
20%

On snow, the dynamic shifts considerably. The Fulda Kristall Control HP2 is at its best here, scoring 82.1 for snow performance — above the Semperit's 75.0 — and posting strong marks in ice lateral guidance (85), snow braking (84) and snow traction (82.7). AutoBild has consistently recognised its high lateral traction and short snow braking distances, and real-world owners on challenging winter roads report confidence in heavy and wet snow conditions. In measured snow braking across two shared tests, both tyres average an identical 30.2m — a genuine dead heat that underlines how closely matched they are when the surface turns white. The Semperit's snow handling score of 78.8 is solid, and testers note convincing winter capability overall, but some evaluations have flagged slightly reduced lateral guidance on snow compared to dedicated snow specialists like the Fulda. For drivers who regularly face deep or compacted snow, the Kristall Control HP2's single clear advantage is here.

Dry
Confidence
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
68%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
72%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
80%
Dry braking
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
55%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
59%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
85%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
88%
Dry handling
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
75%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
83%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
91%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
84%
Dry lane changing
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
73%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
91%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
86%

Neither tyre is a dry-road star — that is broadly expected at this price point — but the Semperit holds a meaningful advantage. Its dry handling score of 71.5 outpaces the Fulda's 67.8, and testers have noted the Speed-Grip 5 behaves as a genuinely balanced tyre on dry tarmac, with composed turn-in and predictable limit behaviour. The Kristall Control HP2 is more troubled on dry roads: a tendency toward pronounced understeer has been flagged repeatedly, and braking distances on dry surfaces are extended. One owner put it bluntly — stopping from 40 km/h in a short urban emergency required more road than expected on brand-new rubber. The Semperit is the clearer choice for drivers who spend meaningful time on cleared winter roads or milder conditions.

Comfort
Confidence
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
71%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
80%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
91%
Exterior noise
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
64%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
77%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
84%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
89%
Comfort
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
69%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
80%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
84%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
62%

The Semperit Speed-Grip 5 is the more refined tyre to live with day to day. Its comfort score of 80.3 comfortably leads the Fulda's 70.9, and its noise score of 81 versus the Fulda's 72.4 is a difference that translates into a noticeably quieter cabin on motorway runs — a point Fulda owners have flagged themselves, noting that rolling noise becomes intrusive above 100 km/h. On rolling resistance, both are efficient by winter tyre standards — the Semperit scores 83 against the Fulda's 79.2 — but the Speed-Grip 5's fuel efficiency credentials are particularly strong, earning it top marks in this category across multiple ADAC evaluations. Where the Fulda edges back is predicted mileage score of 62 versus the Semperit's 55.5, suggesting the Kristall Control HP2 may last longer on tread — something to weigh against the Semperit's other daily advantages.

Costs
Confidence
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
76%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
75%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
72%
Rolling resistance
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
79%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
83%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
74%
Michelin PILOT ALPIN 5
70%
Mileage
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
62%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
56%
Price/value
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
81%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
79%
Ice
Confidence
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
77%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
53%
GoodYear UltraGrip Performance 3
23%
Ice braking
Fulda Kristall Control HP2
62%
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
53%

Tread pattern comparison

Fulda Kristall Control HP2
Semperit Speed-Grip 5
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Verdict

The Semperit Speed-Grip 5 is the better winter tyre for the vast majority of drivers. Its balance across wet, dry and snow conditions — combined with low rolling resistance, quieter running and strong test placement — makes it the smarter buy in this segment, especially given its Continental group engineering background and consistently strong independent test results. At AutoBild 2024 it finished third overall out of 20 tyres; the Fulda finished 19th. The Fulda Kristall Control HP2 earns its place for buyers in genuinely snow-heavy regions who want maximum cold-surface capability on a tight budget and can accept the compromises elsewhere — particularly the wet braking deficit and the dry-road handling limitations. It is a snow specialist first and a balanced winter tyre second. For mixed European winters with plenty of cold rain, the Semperit is the recommendation without hesitation.

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