Tyre price gap closing between Canada and US

US-tyres

Some Ontario tyre dealerships have dropped their prices this year, closing the price gap between Canada and the US

  • Canada-US price gap complaints could trigger investigations
  • Cheap US tyres on Canadians’ holiday shopping lists

Some dealers say manufactures are to thank for the price decrease.

“A lot of the tyre manufactures have really listened to our complaints and they have brought their pricing a lot closer to the US,” said Tammy Meye, the General Manager at Heritage Tire.

She said last year there was a 20-25 per cent price gap between prices at her shop and US competitors.

A year ago, the Senate committee on finance confirmed that “country pricing” by tyre manufacturers forces consumers across Canada to pay anywhere from 30 to 50 per cent more for the same tyres selling in the US

“Now we’re seeing it very, very close,” said Meye. “I actually had a customer there last week who had priced over there and priced over here — we were $1 different a tyre, so that’s fantastic to see.”

According to Dave Santing, president of OK Tire, retail tyre sales are up by 15 per cent this season, and tyre prices are down 3-5 per cent.

It’s a bit of a different market than last year, when US competitors were luring customers over with rock bottom prices.

“Retail tyre sales are stronger than the previous year,” he said. “From the manufactures, some of the pricing did come down slightly.”

Santing said falling prices aren’t common. Typically prices are up every year.

He said the last time he saw prices drop like this was 8-10 years ago.

Kevin Rathwell said he likes to spend his money on the Canadian side of the border. But when he bought his winter tyres in Windsor this year he noticed the difference.

Rathwell spent $500 dollars on a set of winter tyres this year.

“It was a better price then it has been in the past,” he said.

Bob Bignell, executive director of the Tire Dealers Association in Ontario said a few factors have contributed to the lower tyre prices, including the lower Canadian dollar.

“They’ve been pretty competitive this year, it’s not just the tyre dealers … all retailers across Canada have stood up and protected their turf and they’ve taken a direct attack on the big US shopping season,” Bignell said.

Bignell said it has been a better tyre season than Canada has seen in decades.

“It’s just been a re-adjustment, the manufactures value the relationship with the tyre dealers. The independent tyre dealers are really the expert conduit to the consumer for the manufacturer,” he said.

Low dollar, winter demand also factors

“There’s a lot more of a realization of the importance of putting winter tyres on so that’s contributed to it as well,” said Bignell. “With the dollar being the way it is … and an early snow contributed to a real big season for the tyre dealers.”

He said retailers have been so busy this year, some are already running out of stock.

Bignell has spoken with a few tyre dealers and they’ve told him “this has been absolutely frenzied this year, to put tyres on.”

But will these prices last, is the question everyone is asking.

“The weather we can’t predict for next year, we can’t predict the dollar, but I think the pricing, from the manufacturing and the programs, it looks like they’re starting to pair up, hopefully that will continue from here on,” Bignell said.