
For the record, TyreReviews did not conduct the tests that rated those tires as the comfiest in the summer tire class. Rather, the results stemmed from AutoBild’s annual Summer Tire Test, which ranks as one of Europe’s most extensive and important tire testing events, covering things like dry and wet driving, noise, rolling resistance, value, and durability. In the comfort category, the Dunlop, Hankook, Bridgestone, and Goodyear tires were followed by models from Nokian, Kumho, Kleber, Pirelli, Vredestein, Toyo, Continental, Sava, Nexen, Linglong, Yokohama, Michelin, and Falken, which all scored 7.3 points a piece. Meanwhile, tires from Maxxis, Victra, and Giti rounded out the top 20 with a score of 6.7 each.
As it is, the Hankook Ventus Evo scored well in several other categories, including Dry Braking, Dry Handling, Subjective Dry Handling, Wet Handling, and Value. In the end, the dry weather dominance of Hankook’s Ventus Evo was more than enough for the tires to earn the top spot in AutoBild’s overall Summer Tire rankings. Goodyear’s Eagle F1 Asymmetric 6 tires placed second, with Michelin’s Pilot Sport 5’s taking third place overall. Closing out the Top 5 are Giti’s GitiSport S2 plus and Pirelli’s Cinturato C3, which technically fell into a tie for fourth place.
Those results are no doubt a big deal for Giti and Pirelli, which are well-enough known, but aren’t always included among the major brands rated just ahead of them in Autobild’s summer tire testing. The results also mark a big win for Hankook, who earned an unwelcome honor in a recent JD Power satisfaction survey.

