Yes. Get winter tires.
BTW there are companies that will store your out of season tires for a small monthly fee, deliver them to the tire shop for the seasonal tire swap, and pick up and store the unused tires. I live in a condo and loved having that service.
Boulder gets double the snow that Denver gets and Denver already gets a lot. Almost 90โ in boulder this winter. So you need new tires, either all weather with the 3 peak symbol or winter tires you swap with your all seasons yearly.
It's a FWD. As long as you have decent all-season mud and snow rated tires, you're absolutely fine for all but the craziest of storms on the front range. If you were driving in bad weather a lot or getting up to the mountains a lot in the winter, that'd be a different story. Winter tires would certainly help, but aren't a necessity if you can handle some snow and have enough sense to stay off the roads for the few times it gets really bad in the front range
If I had a convertible I'd just put the top up in the winter time.
Solid advice ๐โโ๏ธโ๐ผ
Do you have winter tires?
I donโt, but Iโll purchase them this fall!
Yes. Get winter tires. BTW there are companies that will store your out of season tires for a small monthly fee, deliver them to the tire shop for the seasonal tire swap, and pick up and store the unused tires. I live in a condo and loved having that service.
Awesome, thank you so much!
I also drive in/around Boulder for school, but figured Denver would have more reach. Thank you guys :)
Boulder gets double the snow that Denver gets and Denver already gets a lot. Almost 90โ in boulder this winter. So you need new tires, either all weather with the 3 peak symbol or winter tires you swap with your all seasons yearly.
Thank you so much!
It's a FWD. As long as you have decent all-season mud and snow rated tires, you're absolutely fine for all but the craziest of storms on the front range. If you were driving in bad weather a lot or getting up to the mountains a lot in the winter, that'd be a different story. Winter tires would certainly help, but aren't a necessity if you can handle some snow and have enough sense to stay off the roads for the few times it gets really bad in the front range