The 10 Best Vehicles for Snow and Ice

November 13th, 2009

I’ve driven a lot of cars in the snow and am surprised at how much difference I’ve seen even in vehicles that otherwise are comparable to each other.

As winter begins to set in across the country, we figure it’s a good time to create a list of the best cars, trucks and SUVs for plowing through deep snow and easing over slippery ice. Here are my top ten, but feel free to drop a comment and let us know what you drive in the snow and how it does.

Toyota 4Runner/ Tacoma

Toyota_tacoma

Throw any weather situation at either of these Toyotas and you’ll make it through just fine.

Audi A6 Quattro

Audi_A6

I had a boss once who loved his A6 so much he’d take me out on snowy mornings and speed through the twisties, trying to make his car come unstuck. He succeeded only once, and broke an axle for the effort.

Honda CR-V

Honda_CRV

I chose this over the Pilot because it’s lighter. The Pilot gets a little top-heavy, which makes going down icy hills a heart-racing experience, while the smaller CR-V crawls easily to the bottom.

Subaru Forester

Subaru_Forester

A low center of gravity and all-wheel drive combine to make the Forester a winner in the snow and cold.

Jeep Wrangler

Jeep_Wrangler

If you’ve got a hard top and doors on your Wrangler, nothing should stop you from reaching the top of the mountain.

Volvo XC90

Volvo_XC90

Lots of ground clearance, lots of weight, but a low center of gravity make the AWD version of the XC90 a great winter car.

Suzuki SX4

Suzuki_sx4

Being a 2,500-pound small car, this thing stays planted. And with the ability to choose AWD or lock it into 4WD, the SX4 is a great commuter car for snowy highways. Just don’t take it on the trails.

Lexus RX

lexus_rx350

As long as you’re not running low-profile 18-inch summer tires, this little Lexus will serve you well through any winter storm.

Porsche Cayenne

Porsche_Cayenne

This is for those who want a little extra flashiness in the their snowy commutes, plus the added benefit of the residual heating function, which will keep the Cayenne heated for up to 20 minutes after shutting the engine off.

BMW 328i xDrive

2009_bmw_328i_xDrive

With dynamic stability control and intelligent all-wheel drive, what else do you need in a winter car? Oh… headlamp washers? Okay, you get those, too.

What do you drive in the snow?

-tgriffith

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  1. truck
    December 10th, 2009 at 01:23 | #1

    Well the nissan frontier drives just as well as the tacoma. i think the top vehicles are the tacoma, frontier, 4runner and xterra.

  2. J. Waxman
    December 19th, 2009 at 16:41 | #2

    I drive a Range Rover sport supercharged and the car stinks in snow and forget about driving on ice. People think that since this is a 70 thousand dollar car its invincible in any weather, but theyre wrong. the car really does stink. Ive driven all kinds of suvs and i think the BMW X5 is the best in the snow. Audis Q7 is also amazing in the snow.

  3. Joe
    December 28th, 2009 at 02:29 | #3

    It’s not necessarily the AWD/4X4 system or weight of the vehicle that makes a significant difference. The tires you’re riding on make the biggest impact. A Hummer H1 with summer tires will perform worse than a FWD sedan with good winter tires. As for driving on ice…studded snow tires or tire chains are only getting through that…the type of vehicle doesn’t matter. It’s all in the tire.

  4. PulSamsara
    January 4th, 2010 at 21:44 | #4

    Range Rover ? Any list that includes one of these is suspect… it might go through snow but then break down on top of the snow pile…

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