Skip advert
Advertisement

Continental ContiSportContact 5

The new ContiSportContact 5 scored a victory on its tyre test debut, albeit by a very narrow margin. Key to this success were our braking tests.

Continental ContiSportContact 5

Best buy

The new ContiSportContact 5 scored a victory on its tyre test debut, albeit by a very narrow margin. Key to this success were our braking tests.

The engineers at Continental have really found something when it comes to stopping, both in the wet and dry. In wet conditions, the tyre’s braking performance was much better than any of its competitors’. In fact, its closest rival needed an average of three metres more to bring the car to a halt, while the worst wet braking performer required over eight metres more.

Advertisement - Article continues below

This is easily the difference between having a crash and not. The Conti was also the most consistent performer here – every stop we measured was within not much more than 50cm of the previous one.

And in the dry braking test, it ran out a convincing winner again. It’s not all about braking, though: the ContiSportContact 5 was at ease in the aquaplaning tests, too, with second and third, and was best of the rest behind the Goodyear and Dunlop in rolling resistance.

Even where this tyre didn’t perform so well, it didn’t trail by enough to affect its overall ranking – so while it only came sixth on the wet handling track, it was within three per cent of the best. Similarly, it was sixth on the high-speed circuit, but under four per cent behind the winner.

The wet track suited it better, as it had good balance and traction here. On the dry handling circuit, it lacked the sporty feel of the best, and triggered the stability control electronics earlier. Yet it still felt safe and secure – and this fine all-round showing seals another win for Continental.

1st place

Test results 
Dry braking 100%
Dry handling96.8%
Wet cornering90.3%
Wet braking100%
Wet handling97.4%
Straight aqua96.2%
Curved aqua94.3%
Cabin noise98.3%
Rolling resistance80.4%
Overall100%
Skip advert
Advertisement
In This Review

New & used car deals

Audi A3

Audi A3

RRP £26,295Avg. savings £4,213 off RRP*Used from £10,995
Nissan Juke

Nissan Juke

RRP £19,785Avg. savings £4,644 off RRP*Used from £9,295
Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £38,030Avg. savings £3,144 off RRP*Used from £24,851
Vauxhall Corsa

Vauxhall Corsa

RRP £19,690Avg. savings £5,308 off RRP*Used from £10,999
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Some Chinese car brands are doomed to disappear, warns Skoda boss
Skoda Kodiaq - front cornering

Some Chinese car brands are doomed to disappear, warns Skoda boss

Skoda’s sales and marketing boss warns “there will be a consolidation” of the number of Chinese car brands around
News
3 Feb 2026
New Kia EV1 electric city car on the way to rival the Renault Twingo
Kia EV1 - front (watermarked)

New Kia EV1 electric city car on the way to rival the Renault Twingo

Kia's design boss lifts the lid on plans for a Renault Twingo and Volkswagen ID. Lupo rival, and our exclusive images preview how the EV1 could look
News
2 Feb 2026
Meet Renault’s new SUV: a Dacia Duster but not as we know it…
Renault Duster - front

Meet Renault’s new SUV: a Dacia Duster but not as we know it…

Posher inside and out and with more headroom, welcome to the upside down world of the Indian Duster
News
26 Jan 2026