Tires, tires, tires. The best winter tires on a FWD in snow will perform better than all season tires on an AWD in the same amount of snow.
The AWD Telluride comes with slightly better OE all season tires than the FWD Telluride. But if you do lots of snow driving you should consider dedicated snow tires for winter and decent all season tires the rest of the year regardless of transmission.
The same all season tires on both FWD or AWD you may notice slightly better traction in the AWD in wet conditions. But traction is not measured in the transmission it is where the rubber meets the road. So the AWD system is trying to react to road conditions. If you can’t improve road conditions you can buy tires with better traction. The braking and handling will be similar between FWD or AWD with equal tires.
It is my understanding in the Kia Telluride AWD system that when you turn on snow mode 80% power goes to the front and 20% goes to the back. But if you enable AWD lock mode you get even distribution throughout. So that tells me if you drive in snow you would rather have power up front. To improve on mpg the AWD runs on 100% FWD unless the system detects a loss of traction. With excellent tires for your road conditions that likely means AWD would be engaged less frequently.
If you are a hardcore off-roader than the modern AWD systems are not the same as a lift, bigger tires and true 4x4. If that’s your need, you should consider a 4x4 truck because bigger tires means more surface area to come in contact with the road or driving surface and that equates to more traction when needed, but they aren't as narrow so some winter driving might be tougher because you have more work on the brakes.
Here’s a sortable tire rating chart. Disclaimer, Tirerack is trying to sell you tires so they are likely only rating tires that they sell.
20" example ratings
18" example ratings
They are different because 245/50-20 tires vs 245/60-18 are different sizes. So technically even an AWD LX with 18" tires might do better in a rain/snow race than an AWD SX with 20" tires for a number of reasons. The LX AWD has less overall vehicle weight over the plus sized wheel and tire in the SX AWD and both have the same brakes the brakes just don't work as hard on the LX. Some people believe that more cushion provides better grip because you have more air to adjust for traction and ride comfort and 18" may last longer and cost less, but really it comes down to the brakes being the same and more work to stop the heavier vehicle with 20" over the lighter with 18". This can be also overcome by having dedicated 18" snow tires on lighter weight steel rims that you put on when needed.
For comparison, Tirerack classifies the OE FWD tires (Pirelli Scorpion Zero A/S) as Ultra High Performance All-Season tires. While they classify the OE AWD Michelin Primacy Tour tires as Grand Touring All-Season.
This is how they rank average scores on a scale of 1-10 for those categories and snow tires:
| Ultra High Performance All-Season | Grand Touring All Season | Studless Ice/Snow |
| Wet | 8 | 7.3 | 6 |
| Dry | 8 | 7.5 | 6 |
| Winter | 5.5 | 7.5 | 9.5 |
| Ride comfort / Noise | 7 | 9 | 6 |
| Tread | 6 | 8 | 6 |
Here's a CR review of the
Palisade with 20" wheels as compared to a Telluride with 18" wheels. Spoiler, they report the 18" Telluride has better breaking distance wet/dry conditions:
So in summary, a FWD LX with 18" excellent tires for the road conditions could outperform an AWD SX with 20" all season tires in handling and braking and the right tires could outweigh the slight edge in response to traction you might get with an AWD because the added traction from the tire would not elicit a response from the transmission to change power distribution along with the added weight the second differential gives you in the AWD. Even AWD never replaces safe driving and proper equipment for the conditions. If the AWD with proper tires is what you want then you are covered all around and the vehicle will give you power if it detects a slip.