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More skiers ski in boots that are too big than boots that are too small. It's an understandable mistake — ski boots are uncomfortable to begin with, and the instinct is to give yourself room. That room costs you control, and it accelerates the breakdown of the liner. Getting ski boot sizing right starts with understanding that the measurement system is completely different from street shoes.
Mondo sizing: what it actually is
Ski boots use mondo sizing, which is simply your foot length in centimeters. A mondo 27.0 boot is sized for a foot that is 270mm long. A mondo 25.5 is sized for a 255mm foot. The scale runs in half-centimeter (5mm) increments.
To measure your mondo size, stand on a piece of paper and trace the outline of your foot. Measure from the back of the heel to the tip of the longest toe in millimeters, then divide by 10. Do both feet — most people have feet of different length, and you size to the larger foot. Do this measurement at the end of the day when your feet are at their largest.
Your mondo number is a starting point, not a final answer. Boot shells and liners within the same mondo size vary by brand and model. A Tecnica Mach1 in 27.0 and a Salomon S/Pro in 27.0 are not the same fit.
The shell fit check
The shell fit check is the most reliable way to assess ski boot fit, and it's something any boot fitter will do. Remove the liner from the shell. Put your foot — with ski socks — directly into the empty shell. Slide your foot forward until your toes just touch the front of the shell. Now check the gap behind your heel.
- 10–15mm gap: performance fit. Toes will lightly brush the front when skiing; foot is held firmly. Appropriate for aggressive, high-performance skiing.
- 15–20mm gap: recreational fit. Comfortable all-day with good control. The right target for most intermediate to advanced skiers.
- More than 25mm gap: the shell is too big. Your foot will move inside the liner, causing blisters, loss of control, and liner breakdown.
The liner adds volume inside the shell and compresses and molds over time. A brand-new liner feels snug; after 10–15 days of skiing it will have packed out by roughly one mondo size. This is why sizing too big at purchase is a trap — you're sizing for how the boot feels on day one, not how it will feel on day 30.
Last width
Last width is the width of the boot shell at the widest point of the forefoot, measured in millimeters. Standard boot lasts run from 97mm (low-volume, narrow) to 104mm (wide). Most adult boots cluster around 98–102mm.
- 97–98mm: narrow/performance last. Fits low-volume feet with narrow forefoot. Common in race and high-performance boots.
- 100–101mm: medium last. The most common width. Fits average-width feet.
- 102–104mm: wide last. For genuinely wide feet or high-volume feet. Provides comfort without requiring shell modification.
If the boot pinches your forefoot at the widest point when the buckles are fully open, the last is too narrow. You can have a boot punched (stretched) at the forefoot by a boot fitter, typically for $20–40 per point. This adds 3–4mm of width at the punched location and is a reliable, durable modification. But it's better to start with the right last.
Volume: the dimension no one talks about enough
Volume refers to the overall internal space of the boot, incorporating foot height (instep), heel pocket depth, and ankle width — not just forefoot width. A wide foot and a high-volume foot are not the same thing. Someone can have a narrow foot with a high instep, which requires a high-volume boot despite the narrow width.
To assess volume roughly: put the shell-only (no liner) on your foot and try to buckle it closed. If the shell won't close over your instep without forcing it, the volume is too low. If it closes easily with significant space above your instep, the volume is high.
Aftermarket footbeds (custom or semi-custom) affect volume. A thick footbed raises the foot inside the shell, reducing effective upper volume. If you use custom orthotics in everyday life, bring them to your boot fitting.
Flex rating and fit
Flex rating affects how the boot feels when buckled, but it doesn't affect the shell geometry. A flex 130 and a flex 90 in the same model and size have the same shell — the flex is a property of the cuff and tongue materials, not the shell shape. Don't choose a lower flex to make a too-tight shell more comfortable; that's not how it works.
Common mistakes
- Sizing up for toe room. Ski boot toes don't need free space. Toes should lightly touch or be close to the front when cold; they compress and retract as your foot warms up and the liner molds.
- Ignoring width and volume. Two people with the same mondo size but different foot shapes need different boots. The number is a starting point.
- Trying boots with the wrong socks. Ski socks should be thin, fit to the knee, and have no seams under the foot. Thick hiking socks make the fit feel roomier than it will be when skiing.
- Buying online without a fitting. For your first pair, go to a boot fitter. The shell check, volume assessment, and footbed recommendations require a physical fitting. Online is fine for rebuying a model you already know fits.
Where to Buy
REI — REI stores offer in-person boot fitting with staff trained to do the shell check and assess last width. Their selection covers beginner through intermediate, and they stock wide-last options from Salomon, Lange, and Nordica.
evo — Strong online selection with detailed last-width and volume information in product descriptions. evo's Seattle, Denver, and Portland stores offer expert boot fitting services including footbed fabrication. Worth calling ahead to book a fitting appointment.
Skis.com — Wide selection of performance and all-mountain boots across price points, with genuine spec data (flex, last width) for each model. Particularly strong on Atomic, Rossignol, and Lange — brands with consistent mondo-to-shell sizing documentation.