A search gives me lots of hits to buy tyres/tires on-line.
But I would appreciate recommendations from EFers of companies that deliver what’s on the tin without customs/boarder issues. I’d prefer to buy from CH, but wouldn’t turn down a bargain.
Apparently 1 March is the beginning of meteorological Spring* and temps forecast to be +6 or higher from now.
I have used https://www.reifendirekt.ch about 10 times in CH & France. Factory fresh tyres usually a few weeks old, sourced in Germany & delivered to a local tyre shop within a week. The price is cheaper in CH than FR/DE due to lower VAT in CH.
Thanks fmf, I note that that site redirects to 123pnues.ch
I’ve got a 16+ year old Yaris. Need summer tyres but don’t want to break the bank, particularly when the tires will likely be more valuable than the car.
Since I see that you're located in Nyon, I would check out http://www.pneusclaude.ch/ as well. It's a tyres' selling/storing/fitting place. From a quick comparison I did vs reifendirekt, my Blizzaks LM 005 were CHF5.- cheaper per tyre at Pneus Claude.
I don't think they deliver though, if that's your primary concern.
It's the same company (123pneus is in French, reifendirekt is in German) and the prices are the same -- I've used them many times as well and have the same experience as FMF. Fresh tyres at good prices.
I bought brand new winter tyres + wheels for my Audi on Ricardo. The seller changed the tyres just before buying a new car and found out the wheels didn't fit on the new car. There are always such cases on the market.
As I could also sell the old wheels, I had a new set of Dunlops for 100 CHF
most of these suppliers are actually same company as reifendirekt based in hamburg germany. it's pretty terrible when anything goes wrong.
i've on a few occasions had unexpected large delays, or unexplained extra tyres they have delivered and then tried to sue me for not returning. I had one 500 CHF tyre sitting here for over a year before they finally sent DPD to collect it.
i've settled on pneuexperte.ch (which is a different german company behind the scenes) as my go to source. they seem to have good prices, a reasonable selection and seem to work.
one thing to note with all online suppliers is they have no control over the date code of the tyre. i won't accept any date codes over a year old. sometimes you get tyres that are older and there is some german law that says anything up to 3 years old is considered 'brand new'. in this case, you just need to return them and order them locally or from somewhere else.
Er, we are not looking for high performance tires. These are for a 16yr old 1.2 Toyota Yeti that probably doesn’t get 10k km a year. I’m looking for the absolute lowest price. I’m certain the tires will outlive the car.
But I’m certain others will appreciate your advice.
Rifendierct will have about 50 plus suitable tyres, you will certainly be able to buy some very cheap Chinese if thats really what you want. They will also get you the best price on known branded tyres.
I could not find a Toyota Yeti. Do you mean the Toyota Yaris?
Do be careful in going for the absolute cheapest tires or they very well may outlive the car!
You need tires that allow you to stop on both dry and wet roads if you are hoping to do 10k km per year without an accident. Yes, you do not need the highest performance tires but a lesser know brand or model from one of the major companies for about CHF 55.- per tire should be possible assuming 14 inch tires.
100x this. Tyres are the only thing that are connecting you to the road. I don’t understand why anyone would ever skimp on them. There’s a reason cheap tyres are called ditch finders. Even if you don’t want to pay for Michelin, Continental etc at least look at the mid range brands like Vredestein or Falken.
I agree that it's a bit silly to forego on tyres, especially when quality tyres for this car are not going to be expensive. I just checked and for between CHF50-60 you can choose between Pirelli, Continental and Goodyear. Why wouldn't you?
This is true, but price doesn't always equal quality - I check the reviews and pick something which is a decent price but in the top review quartile for the features I need.
A few years ago I had some slightly more expensive Continental winters, without doing enough checks. They were crap - very noisy and still didn't seem to give much grip (which is subjective since I didn't have a significant adverse event, but they felt wrong on cornering and braking).