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A ski shop hot wax costs $25–$45 and takes two days. You can do the same job at home in 45 minutes for under $5 in materials, once you have the tools. This is not a difficult skill. The techniques that matter are wax temperature, scraping direction, and brushing sequence — not mystery.
Hot wax vs rub-on wax: which do you need?
Rub-on wax — crayon-style blocks you apply cold and buff in — is fast and better than nothing. It's the right call when you're at the mountain and your bases have gone white and dry mid-day. But it sits on the base surface rather than penetrating it, and it wears off quickly. Plan on one run before it's mostly gone in cold, dry conditions.
Hot wax penetrates the porous polyethylene base material and lasts 4–10 ski days depending on conditions and base quality. For anything beyond a two-day trip, hot wax is worth it.
Tools you need
- Waxing iron. A dedicated ski waxing iron ($40–$80) maintains temperature more accurately than a clothes iron, whose sole plate is too small and whose steam holes create uneven heat. Ski irons typically run 110°C–160°C. If you use a clothes iron, use the cotton/linen setting and remove any water.
- Plastic scraper. A $8–$12 Plexi scraper, 3–5mm thick. Thin scrapers flex too much and leave wax behind. Sharpen it with a fine file or sandpaper after every few uses — a dull scraper drags rather than shaves.
- Brushes. Minimum: a stiff nylon brush for removing bulk wax and a softer horsehair brush for polishing. A third bronze/brass brush for opening the base structure after scraping is useful but not essential for recreational skiers.
- Base cleaner. A citrus-based solvent spray and a lint-free cloth. Run this across the bases before waxing to remove old wax residue, dirt, and ski shop silicon treatments that block penetration.
- Wax. For most recreational skiers, an all-temperature glide wax covers 90% of conditions. Race-specific temperature-banded waxes (Swix LF or HF series, Toko NF range) matter when you're optimising for hundredths — not for recreational skiing.
The waxing process, step by step
1. Clean the bases
Spray base cleaner along the full length of each ski and wipe immediately with a lint-free cloth, always moving tip to tail. Repeat until the cloth comes back clean. Let bases dry for five minutes before waxing — solvent residue on a hot base can degrade the polyethylene.
2. Set iron temperature
Consult your wax packaging — most all-temperature glide waxes specify 120°C–130°C. The correct test: hold the iron 1–2cm above the base and drip wax onto it. The wax should melt and flow immediately, not smoke. Smoking wax means the iron is too hot and you're oxidising the wax, reducing its effectiveness and potentially damaging the base.
3. Apply the wax
Touch the wax block to the iron so it drips in a zigzag pattern along the base. You want one continuous drip line, not pooling. Then iron the wax in with slow, continuous passes — tip to tail — without stopping. A stopped iron burns the base. Keep the iron moving at roughly one ski length per 8–10 seconds. You want the wax liquid and the base warm, not the base hot. Three or four passes is usually enough.
4. Let it cool
Leave the ski horizontal in a cool location for a minimum of 20–30 minutes. Some technicians wait an hour. The wax is penetrating the base as it cools — scraping hot wax pulls it back out. Don't put the ski near a heat source.
5. Scrape
Hold the scraper at roughly 45 degrees and drag tip to tail with firm, even pressure. You're removing all the wax that didn't penetrate — which will be most of what you applied. This is correct; don't try to leave a wax layer. Make passes until you're removing only fine shavings. The base should look matte, not glossy.
6. Brush
Start with the stiff nylon brush: firm strokes, tip to tail, 10–15 passes. This removes wax from the base's surface structure — the micro-channels that create the glide surface. Follow with the horsehair brush at lighter pressure, same direction, until the base has a uniform sheen. This sequence is not optional: skipping brushing leaves wax in the structure and creates suction drag on snow.
How often to wax
A useful rule: look at the bases. If the colour is uniform and the surface looks slightly wet, the base is in good shape. If you see white or grey patches — particularly under the binding area where the most flex occurs — the base is dry and you need wax. Most recreational skiers who ski 20–30 days a season should wax 3–4 times per season. Hard pack and machine-made snow eat wax faster than natural powder. Wet spring snow is gentler.
Temperature-specific waxing
If you're optimising glide in specific conditions, wax temperature range matters. Colder, drier snow (below -10°C / 14°F) requires a harder wax with less fluorocarbon; warmer wet snow (above -4°C / 25°F) needs a softer, more hydrophobic formula. Most recreational all-temp waxes cover -20°C to 0°C tolerably. Outside that range, using a temperature-appropriate wax makes a meaningful difference in feel and speed.
Base repairs: before or after waxing
If you have deep gouges (into or through the base material — you can tell because the scratch is white rather than dark), repair those before waxing. P-tex candles melt into the gouge and are scraped flush when cool. Waxing over an unrepaired gouge doesn't fill it and can make the base harder to repair afterward. Minor surface scratches don't need repair — they'll fill with wax on their own over a few sessions.
The cost case for doing it yourself
A mid-range starter waxing kit (iron, scraper, two brushes, base cleaner, 180g all-temp wax) costs $80–$120. A shop hot wax runs $25–$45. After three to five sessions, the kit has paid for itself. More importantly, you can wax the night before every trip rather than leaving your skis dry for weeks between shop visits.
Where to Buy
These retailers carry waxing kits, individual irons, scrapers, brushes, and wax brands including Swix, Toko, Holmenkol, and Rex.
- REI. Carries a curated range of waxing tools and all-temperature glide waxes. Good for starter kits from brands like Swix and Toko. In-store staff at ski-focused locations can walk you through iron selection.
- Backcountry.com. Wide selection including race-grade waxes and dedicated ski irons. Good source for full Swix and Toko product lines including temperature-specific waxes not carried in most physical stores.
- evo. Strong waxing category with gear and apparel from both mass-market and niche suppliers. Carries P-tex repair candles and edge tools alongside waxing supplies, useful if you're building out a full tune kit in one order.