Ontario Winter Tires
- mmadrid18
- Nov 10
- 3 min read
Updated: Nov 24
This past Sunday, Ontario Provincial Police responded to over 220 motor vehicle crashes. The startling number of collisions was a result of the first major snowfall crossing paths with unprepared vehicle operators. Undoubtedly, a lack of winter tires will have played a role in many of these collisions. One of the reasons for the amount of vehicles slipping and sliding may be that Ontario does not mandate winter tires by law, in contrast to Quebec.
Winter Tire Usage
On a positive note, Ontario drivers are significantly more likely to install winter tires than they were previously. On the other hand, Ontario drivers are less likely to utilize winter tires than not only Quebeckers, but also those in Atlantic Canada, and even British Columbia.[1]
The Tire and Rubber Association of Canada has several theories as to why a third of Ontario’s population still resists winter tires. Their 2023 Canadian Consumer Winter Tire Study found that the most common reason drivers did not install winter tires was because they believed all-season tires were good enough. This post will examine how that belief and several others surrounding Winter tires, are mostly based on myths.
It won’t be surprising that an Ontario personal injury lawyer recommends winter tires. This post will explain why winter tires are so more effective and attempt to debunk some of the myths that prevent people from buying winter tires. For a related video, click here.

Yes. Study after study has proven that winter tires are significantly safer in winter than regular tires and all-season tires. The differences found in average stopping distance is typically 20-50% less for winter tires. With that in mind, it’s easy to understand how winter tires prevent collisions.
The Myths
Myth #1
My tires have good tread, so I don’t need winter tires
To understand why this statement is a myth, it’s important to know why winter tires work so well.
Many people think the only reason winter tires are more effective is because they possess deeper tread, enabling them to grip the road better. While this is true, the primary benefit of winter tires is that they have greater flexibility in low temperatures.
The rubber in tires is designed to be flexible enough to reach in and around the tiny bumps and crevices in pavement. That flexibility causes enhanced traction, which leads to greater responsiveness to braking and steering. However, once temperatures drop below 7 degrees Celsius, summer tires become less flexible. As temperatures continue to decrease, summer tires become progressively more rigid and thus less able to grip the pavement and stop quickly. Imagine a black rubber hockey puck sliding across the ice, and it becomes easy to understand how the diminished flexibility of rubber can increase stopping distances.
On the other hand, winter tires are designed to maintain their flexibility in the cold of winter. This pliability results in greater traction and decreased stopping distances in cold weather. Typically winter tires can maintain flexibility until temperatures become extreme and plunge below -40 degrees.
The flip side is that winter tires actually become too flexible in hot temperatures, which also causes increased temperatures.
Myth #2
I have all-season tires
All-season tires are a compromise between winter and summer tires. Unlike winter tires, all-season tires aren’t too flexible in the summer, and they don’t freeze up at seven degrees. However, once temperatures drop below negative ten degrees, all-season tires lose their pliability. Unfortunately, that’s not good enough for an Ontario winter!
Myth #3
I have Four Wheel Drive, so I don’t need Winter Tires
Owning a Four Wheel Drive vehicle does help with driving in snowy conditions. Switching your vehicle into Four Wheel Drive helps your vehicle accelerate while travelling in snowy conditions. Unfortunately, it does not help your vehicle stop more quickly in the cold. The malleability of your tires does not change with Four Wheel Drive, meaning your chance of sliding into a stopped vehicle is not any lower.
Closing Point
The real reason that people cling to these various myths to avoid installing winter tires is probably because they are expensive. It may sound corny, from a personal injury lawyer’s perspective, the cost of winter tires pales in comparison to the cost of what happens when not using them goes wrong.




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