Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
TuxMat’s Custom-Fit Floor Mats Are Engineered to Elevate Your Interior
cars

TuxMat’s Custom-Fit Floor Mats Are Engineered to Elevate Your Interior

Car and Driver · Jul 1, 2026, 8:09 PM

Key takeaways

  • There is a quiet ritual that comes with having a new vehicle.
  • Floor mats occupy the most heavily trafficked space in the cabin and absorb the consequences of daily life, from salt, slush, and gravel to misdirected french fries.
  • There is no shortage of aftermarket floor mats, but most are built inexpensively as simple rubber slabs.

Why this matters: an automotive development that could shape industry direction or buying decisions.

Car and Driver Home Sponsored Content Tux Mat’s Custom-Fit Floor Mats Are Engineered to Elevate Your Interior Tux Mat’s Custom-Fit Floor Mats Are Engineered to Elevate Your Interior Precision fit, three-layer construction, and the kind of detail most floor mats overlook.

There is a quiet ritual that comes with having a new vehicle. You evaluate every aspect of the design and fit, run your hand along the dashboard, and take in the details that justified the choice. Eventually, you look down—and on most vehicles, the floor mats are where the design conversation quietly ends. Whether your new-vehicle purchase is a strictly economical choice or sits at the highest rung on the luxury ladder, you want to feel good about being inside. TuxMat® believes that a mediocre floor mat is a problem worth solving.

Floor mats occupy the most heavily trafficked space in the cabin and absorb the consequences of daily life, from salt, slush, and gravel to misdirected french fries. They do a job that most drivers stop thinking about shortly after delivery. TuxMat is built on the opposite premise: that nothing in a vehicle should be overlooked, least of all the surface you stand on every time you get in.

Article preview — originally published by Car and Driver. Full story at the source.
Read full story on Car and Driver → More top stories
Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from Car and Driver alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop