2025 Women’s All-Mountain West Skis

2025 Women’s All-Mountain West Recommended Skis

In yet another example of our cutting-edge journalism, permit us to point out that men and women are different.  The pertinent manifestation of this principle is that the same width ski that makes an ideal men’s all-terrain tool is a tad too wide to be an everyday ride for all but the most talented lasses.  Put more succinctly, if you don’t instinctively ride an elevated edge angle, a ski from the All-Mountain West genre should be a second, soft-snow pair of skis.

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The primary reason for taking this precaution is that a wider ski takes more effort to roll up on edge. A lower skill skier is more likely to just push it around, all fun and games in soft snow but a bit like an unguided missile when the snow firms up. Lower skill skiers tend to regard our Power Picks as lacking in forgiving traits, while the experts who log many miles a season don’t detect any unfriendly attitudes no matter where or how they ski them.

So what woman does belong on an All-Mountain West model?  As long as it’s a second ski reserved for soft snow conditions, there’s really no upper or lower suitability threshold for any of our favorites.  And yes, it can be an everyday ski for a strong, athletic woman and probably is serving that function for those lucky enough to ski over 50 days a year.  They do make it look effortless, but it’s worth noting these are ladies who drop their hips within inches of the snow as a matter of course.

The 2025 Women’s All-Mountain West Field

A ski with a waist width between 95mm and 100mm is already a wide ski for a woman, which means most models sold in this genre are likely to be a second pair, intended for soft-snow days or perhaps set up for touring.  Because this market is more limited, brands don’t offer as many options in the All-Mountain West category. Only one major brand offers more than one model in the WAMW genre, and the second option exists mainly to hit a lower price point.

Because of its smaller size, the Women’s All-Mountain West category has a lower rate of model turnover.  This year there were only three newcomers to the genre, only two of which merited inclusion in our Recommended ranks: Völkl’s Secret 96 and Nordica’s Santa Ana 97, both of which are following in the tracks of established stars.   

Power Picks: Dominate Black Diamonds

Fat skis were originally created so skiers of average ability could access slopes they’d never be able to manage on a skinny ski.  That notion does not apply here. These skis were made to help the already accomplished take their game up a notch.  They reserve their best behavior for skiers capable of finding a high edge angle even when motoring off-trail.  They are meant to be ridden hard, fast and athletically.

 

Volkl Secret 96


Völkl has built an enviable reputation for its high-performance women’s skis, despite the fact that many of its most revered models – the Aura, Kiku and Kenja, for example – weren’t really women-specific models, but unisex skis in short sizes. The Secret 96 falls squarely in this tradition, for it faithfully mimics the construction of the new men’s M7 Mantra. What makes the M7/Secret 96 design so remarkable is how its various features work together to create a ginormous performance envelope. One of its foundational elements is Tailored Titanal Frame, that breaks the usual topsheet of Titanal into three separate parts: two long-armed horseshoes wrap around the tip and tail, and a thinner, disconnected plate rides in the center. Just below this Titanal triad is a long slab of fiberglass, a coiled spring just waiting to be energized by compression. The fusion of the metal and fiberglass elements is what gives the Secret 96 its peppy rebound, a trait not often found in wide, all-terrain skis. In the same iconoclastic vein, the two new features that elevate the performance ceiling of the 2025 Secret 96 – 4 Radius Drive and Tailored Carbon Tips – focus on sharpening the short-radius aptitude of the very tip of the ski, where every other ski that calls itself “all-mountain” is rockered entirely out of contact. The new features are meant to enhance the Secret’s ability to cut a clean, sharp corner into a short-radius arc, a level of steering accuracy that no other ski …

Read the full review here

Nordica Santa Ana 97


Nordica has been fiddling with the ideal formula for a women’s all-mountain ski over the course of several product cycles. Four years ago, Nordica solved the riddle of how much metal a wide women’s ski needs to assist stability without smothering agility. Dubbed Terrain-Specific Metal, the construction drops the bottom Ti laminate and trims the top layer down to match the likely terrain each Santa Ana was most likely to encounter. As the second-widest ski in the series, the SA 97 scallops out a larger chunk of Ti in the forebody so the ski feels more lively than lugubrious. For 2025, all the Santa Anas were scrupulously modified to optimize each length in each model, tweaking sidecut and sizing options on the outside and remodeling the core on the inside. The new Pulse core sandwiches a layer of elastomer between two wood cores, creating an easy-to-flex midsection that delivers a smooth ride in rough terrain. The new core allows the lighter-weight skier to bend a ski with the gripping power of Titanal, simultaneously elevating both the Power and Finesse properties of the Santa Ana 97. For the talented women who already knows how to attack a crud field, the Santa Ana 97 delivers on every front. The new design exhibits the rare ability to open up the top of the ski’s performance range but still be so easy to steer that the less skilled skier can confidently make her first forays far off-trail.

Read the full review here

Finesse Favorites: Smooth Operators

 The entire Women’s All-Mountain West category is aimed at an already accomplished lass who isn’t looking for a game-improvement gimmick but a bona fide training partner.  While our Finesse Favorites are fabulous at reducing the physical toll of skiing off-trail, they aren’t a magic pill for those without skills.   But for the talented skier who drives with a soft touch, our Finesse Favorites are real-deal, off-trail magicians, able to smooth out the ride in wicked harbor chop then transition to a deep-bellied carve on corduroy without batting an eye.

Blizzard Sheeva 9


Last season, no new ski model made as significant an improvement in its performance range as Blizzard’s Sheeva 9. A longtime member of the Blizzard Freeride collection, the Sheeva 9 – along with its men’s counterpart, the Rustler 9 – went through a significant re-design last year, boosting its abilities in any terrain it’s likely to encounter during its lifetime. In Realskiers’ terminology, it embellished its Power properties while remaining one of the most accessible, easy-to-steer models in the Women’s All-Mountain West genre. Driving up the Sheeva 9’s fab Finesse scores were two principal drivers: the adoption of Blizzard’s TrueBlend core concept, and a palpable increase in overall width dimensions. TrueBlend is a precise allocation of sturdy beech stringers interspersed with lighter weight poplar in the mid-section and a dose of lighter-still Paulownia at the tip and tail. TrueBlend creates a perfectly balanced flex adapted for each length offered, so the 150cm has the same properties as the 174cm. This adaptation is particularly valuable for the Finesse skier who isn’t used to loading a ski. The increase in waist width (from 92mm to 96mm) gives the Sheeva 9 a substantial boost in surface area, inherently improving both its flotation in new snow and ease of steering in chopped-up terrain. Naturally, this alteration means the Sheeva 9 shifts from a carve arc into a drifted turn with relish, another trait that assists the Finesse skier.

Read the full review here

Head Kore 97 W


Head’s Kore series provides a perfect example of why a great off-trail ski and an ideal women’s ski share the same design criteria. In 21/22, the changes made to the unisex Kore collection were ipso facto applied to its women’s iterations. The same alterations that make the latest Kore 99 a better all-terrain ski also make the Kore 97 W a better women’s ski. The most visible change was to the topsheet, which is now smoothly beveled so the ski slips sideways virtually without resistance, a big help when the snow is deep. A top coating of urethane was added in 2023, to help protect its fleece top. Inside, the Kore’s core was modified by eliminating Koroyd honeycomb and replacing it with more of its Karuba-poplar wood core. This delivers a subtle change in snow feel and feedback that makes the ride feel smoother and more predictable. The only thing the skier notices about the lightweight design is that it takes less effort to steer; there’s no sense of it being skittish or easily knocked off course just because it’s light. As mentioned in the introduction to these reviews, we don’t usually recommend that a recreational woman use an All-Mountain West model as her everyday ride. But the Kore 97 W is so well balanced between its Power and Finesse properties and so confident in all conditions that it’s an exception to this rule.

Read the full review here

Fischer Ranger 96


For several seasons, Fischer subdivided its Ranger family of off-trail models into two distinct clans, indicated by their suffixes: Ti, for those with metal in the mix, and FR, for those without. Among Fischer aficionados, the softer and surfier Ranger FR models had a more distinct, looser character that distinguished them from the large cadre of all-mountain skis with metal in them. Two years ago, Fischer debuted an entirely new Ranger series, ushered from the drawing board to the ski shop wall by none other than Ski HOF member Mike Hattrup. As one might expect from a mash-up of the old FR and Ti branches of the family, some of each genome is entwined in new models like the Ranger 96, which is available in two alternative cosmetics, one of which is a slightly more fem version with a bright yellow topskin. The interchangeability of its men’s and women’s versions inspired Fischer to offer the yellow Ranger 96 in all of its men’s sizes (up to a 187cm!) as well a couple of shorter lengths for lighter ladies. Like the Ti’s of yesteryear, there’s metal in the new Rangers, just not as much as before. The Titanal is confined to the area underfoot, so there’s not enough of it to suppress the loose extremities that appealed to FR fans. Because the metal is mostly underfoot, the tip and tail feel lighter, easier to pivot sideways and generally more genial than a ski with tip-to-tail Ti laminates.

Read the full review here