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Ski weight is the single most referenced spec in backcountry and touring, and it's also the least reliable. Published weights are often wrong by 50–200g per ski, and the way weights are reported varies enough between brands that direct comparisons are frequently misleading.
Per-ski vs per-pair confusion
Some manufacturers publish weight per ski. Others publish weight per pair. Some don't specify. If you're comparing a ski listed at 1,500g against one listed at 3,200g, you might be looking at the same weight — one per ski, one per pair. Always check, and if the listing doesn't specify, assume you don't know.
The convention varies by market segment. Touring and backcountry skis more commonly list per-ski weight (because every gram matters on the uphill). All-mountain and resort skis more often list per-pair. Race skis are a mixed bag.
Stated weight vs measured weight
Manufacturer-stated weights are typically derived from one of three sources: the CAD design weight (theoretical, before production), a pre-production sample, or a cherry-picked production sample. None of these reliably represent what you'll receive.
Production variation in ski manufacturing is significant. The same ski model, same length, same production year can vary by 30–80g per ski from one pair to the next. Wood core density varies. Resin distribution varies. Edge and base material thickness varies. The ski you buy is not the ski that was weighed for the spec sheet.
Swing weight vs static weight
The number on the spec sheet — if it's accurate — tells you static weight: how much the ski weighs on a scale. But what you feel while skiing is swing weight: the rotational inertia of the ski around your boot.
Two skis with identical static weight can have very different swing weights depending on mass distribution. A ski that carries weight in the tip and tail (common in powder skis with heavy metal laminates extending to the extremities) will feel heavier to turn than a ski with mass concentrated underfoot. Cap construction at the tips reduces mass at the extremities — one reason hybrid-construction skis often feel more nimble than their static weight suggests.
Swing weight is almost never published. It requires specialized measurement equipment and there's no industry standard for how to report it. This is one of the biggest blind spots in ski specifications — the number that matters most for how a ski feels is the one nobody provides.
How to get reliable weight data
- Weigh them yourself. A kitchen scale accurate to 1g costs $20 and takes 30 seconds per ski. Weigh both skis — left-right weight differences of 20–50g are normal.
- Check independent sources. Blister, Ski Mag, and dedicated reviewers weigh skis as part of their testing. These measured weights are more trustworthy than manufacturer specs.
- Use manufacturer weights for within-model comparisons only. A brand's 170cm weight vs their 180cm weight is directionally useful even if the absolute number is off, because the measurement methodology is at least consistent.
- Ignore weights published without length. A ski's weight without its length is meaningless data.
Why this matters
For resort skiing, weight differences of 50–100g per ski are genuinely irrelevant. You won't feel it. For touring, where you're lifting each ski thousands of times per climb and every gram compounds over hours, weight accuracy matters. A 150g error across both skis is 300g you didn't plan for. On a long day, that's the difference between a good tour and a suffer-fest. Binding choice adds to this: frame bindings run 800–1200g heavier per pair than pin alternatives, a difference you feel with every uphill step.
We built Snowskid because reliable specs shouldn't require guesswork. When we publish a weight, it's a measured weight, at a stated length, with the measurement method disclosed. Weight is one part of it — for a broader picture of how manufacturer spec sheets diverge from reality across all ski gear categories, see our overview.