2025 Women’s Big Mountain Skis

2025 Women’s Big Mountain Skis

There’s only one good reason for a woman to own a Big Mountain ski, and that’s flotation.  It takes at least 8 inches of uncut snow to float someone on a ski, which should give you some idea how often you might need one yourself.  Point being, a women’s Big Mountain model will be perforce a second pair of skis for a person of at least advanced skills, which shrinks the range of potential buyers. Since they’re unlikely to get a lot of use, they’ll stay in a skier’s locker for over a decade, further shrinking the turnover rate.

Since demand is small, the ski supplier has little incentive to present more than one option in the genre, and less incentive still to make it a unique, feminized construction. Moving the center mark 1cm forward, or providing multiple indicated mounting options, is by far the most common of the gender-driven modifications in the Big Mountain category. 

Because all Women’s Big Mountain models are a riff on a Big Mountain ski meant for larger humans of at least advanced ability to rip around on, they don’t work so well as a set of training wheels for those uninitiated in the mysteries of skiing powder and its evil twin, a tattered, former powder field. If you’re being thrown in the deep end of the pool by a well-meaning friend/guide, get the shortest size offered, avoid models with metal in their make-up and be prepared for the occasional face-plant.  

The 2025 Women’s Big Mountain Field

Because the women’s market for skis over 100mm underfoot remains relatively tiny compared to the Big Mountain market for men, the need to renew old models or introduce new ones is less urgent. Nonetheless, there are three fresh faces in the Women’s Big Mountain collective in 2025, all parts of a larger family make-over: Nordica’s Santa Ana 102, Völkl’s Blaze 104 W and Atomic’s Maven 103 CTi. 

The Santa Ana and Blaze both underwent significant re-design: the new Santa Ana 102 is a softer, surfier version of its old self without shedding its Power properties, while the Blaze 104 W has upped its quotient of edging power and rebound, but at heart remains a mellow Finesse ski that can serve both the in-resort skier and the backcountry adventurer. The Atomic Maven 103 CTi extends the Maven clan into the Big Mountain category, part of a movement among all the Mavens to lessen the negative environmental impact of ski manufacturing. 

Power Picks: Ripping the Gnar

As we never tire of pointing out, the only rationale for acquiring a ski that measures more than 100mm’s underfoot is to improve flotation in powder. Lower skill skiers need the extra buoyancy just to stay upright in the soft stuff, but the women considering one of our Power Picks aren’t looking for help; they’re looking for a ski as good as they are.

 The dirty little secret about skiing crud – which is as close as one gets to powder, even on a good day – is that you have to put the pedal to the metal. Our Power Picks live to be driven hard and fast, the better to shred the choppy conditions that often prevail off-piste. 

Volkl Secret 102


As was the case with its men’s counterpart – the Mantra 102 – last year, the latest bundle of modifications to the Secret 102 has infused it with a complete personality transplant. As succinctly summarized by former US Ski Team member Edie Thys Morgan in her review of the 2023 Secret 102, “This is not the ski for the faint of heart or of flex.” The 2025 Secret 102 has shed its hell-bent ways. It no longer seeks to subdue whatever gets in its way, instead responding to its pilot’s subtle suggestions with grace and poise. What happened to turn a barely tamed bronco into a well-trained show pony? Two factors did most of the heavy lifting, Tailored Titanal Frame and Tailored Carbon Tips. In the original Secret 102, the forward section of the 3-piece Titanal Frame was a one-size-fits-all affair; as of the 2024 iteration, each size received its own part. This is of particular importance in the smaller sizes women prefer. Every aspect of the Secret 102 is size-specific, so shorter skis aren’t saddled with over-sized components. Part of the reason that the double-rockered Secret 102 rips groomers like a fully cambered ski is the manner in which Völkl applies an extra dose of carbon to the shovel. Most carbon that goes into skis are either thin stringers or weaves in a pre-set orientation. To get exactly the pattern they wanted, Volkl engineers created hundreds of prototypes, stitching carbon thread into a fleece matrix to arrive at just …

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Nordica Santa Ana 102


The first edition of the Santa Ana 110 swapped the Enforcer 110’s poplar/beech core for balsa, but otherwise faithfully replicated its unisex structure, including two full sheets of .4mm Titanal. That’s a lot of ski, too much for most women hoping to make powder skiing easier, not more demanding. Three years ago, Nordica found the solution, Terrain Specific Metal: the wider the ski, the more metal is cut out of its forebody. The widest model in the 2025 Santa Ana series is now the Santa Ana 102, an acknowledgement that the best women skiers don’t need skis the width of a barge to float their petite frames in deep powder. Opening up the Santa Ana 102’s performance envelope is largely attributable to a new Pulse core that bisects its vertically laminated wood core and inserts an elastomer laminate in the middle. Splitting the core makes it easier for a lightweight skier to bend it, and the shock-sucking center smoothes out the ride from tip to tail. The top Ti laminate of Terrain Specific Metal provides more than enough bite for hard snow, and keeps the ski calm underfoot on choppy traverses and tracked-up run-outs. All powder skiing entails some foot steering, which is lots easier when there’s less mass to toss around, so the trimmer shape of the new Santa Ana 102 helps make it more maneuverable.

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Blizzard Sheeva 10


Blizzard’s Sheeva 10 optimizes the best qualities of Blizzard’s latest freeride technology, FluxForm. Fluxform deploys Titanal in a different fashion than was last used in these models’ 2023 iterations. Instead of a single, truncated top sheet of Ti, FluxForm concentrates its Ti laminates directly over the edges, in strips that run nearly tip to tail. In the center of the Sheeva 10, roughly where the Ti plate used to be, is a women’s-specific platform that helps distribute force evenly underfoot without the heft of metal. This redeployment of Titanal is the major reason the Sheeva 10 feels more stable from end to end, but it isn’t the only reason it feels at once smoother and more powerful. The other major contributor to the Sheeva 10’s stellar handling is the switch to Blizzard’s carefully crafted TrueBlend core. TrueBlend combines slender tendrils of dense beech interspersed with lightweight poplar and Paulownia in a precise pattern that is adjusted for every size. Note that the Sheeva 10 offers six different sizes on 6mm splits, so women can dial in exactly the right length, which is key for maneuverability in off-trail conditions. While the Sheeva 10 is a powerful ski compared to its predecessor, it’s still simplicity itself to steer. Using Paulownia in the extremities and trimming the Titanal strips down at the ends lowers swingweight, making it easier to swivel, an essential trait in deep snow.

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Finesse Favorites: Easy Access to Off-Trail Adventure

 The skier who benefits the most from a fat, Big Mountain model is someone who longs to master powder technique and can use all the help she can get. A wider ski is easier to balance on and, as long as it’s short enough, can still be swiveled sideways to execute short turns and control speed. The qualities that make a great fat ski are an identical match with the needs of a woman moving up the ability ladder.  Getting on a Finesse fat ski won’t turn you into an overnight expert, but it sure makes learning the ropes infinitely easier.

If you already are an all-terrain expert, but just want to help prolong your ski day, all our Recommended Finesse Favorites have an elevated performance ceiling.  They can comfortably travel any in-resort terrain, which is important because freshies only last for an hour, if that. Their collective ability to stay calm in the choppy crud that prevails thereafter, delays the inevitable onset of fatigue, which is the fat ski’s biggest single contribution to the ski world.

Head Kore 103 W


The Kore 103 W is the unisex Kore 105 with a slightly forward mounting point, in a limited size run of only 3 lengths. A strong, athletic woman might think of looking past the women’s size selection at a 184cm, in order to maximize flotation and stability at speed, but if you pay heed to the testimony of the plus-sized Jim Schaffner, that’s probably a bad idea. “In the shorter size, I felt the 105 to have even greater range and playfulness than the 184cm,” asserted the founder of Start Haus and an active race coach. “I must credit Head for delivering a ton of performance in the Kore line. With the exception of the 105, I skied all of the Kore models in the 177, and they all had amazing horsepower for a svelte 230-pounder like me.” Schaffner’s experience underscores the importance of length selection. I, too, skied the 2023 Kore 105 in both a 184cm and 177cm, and found the shorter length to be substantially more maneuverable, playful and fun. With Graphene in its design arsenal, Head can make a make a ski that’s as stiff as a brick or flexible as a reed, and can just as easily fiddle with the ski’s rigidity anywhere along its flex pattern. This is what allows the Kore 103 W to be supple enough underfoot for a lighter weight skier to bend it, but firmer flexing at the extremities, so it can provide enough support from tip to tail to keep …

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Volkl Völkl Blaze 104 W


In this ski’s original incarnation, the lightweight Blaze 106 W seemed best suited to intermediate to advanced skiers looking for a mellow drifter, but it found a second calling as an in-bounds/backcountry hybrid for experts who appreciated its light weight off-trail and more-than-passable performance on piste. For 2025, the newly anointed Blaze 104 W has been given such an appreciable upgrade that experts may gravitate to it based on its in-bounds performance alone, although its raison d’etre remains its proficiency off-piste. What could have elevated the Blaze 104 W from an intermediate’s crutch to an expert’s daily driver? Part of the transformation was as simple as augmenting the core thickness, but more significant is a clever allocation of Titanal and glass that gives the cambered center of the ski far more power and bite when driven into the turn, married to an energy-fueled exit that makes flowing through the turn transition automatic. Titanal laminates that run wall-to-wall in the ski’s midsection induce a calming effect that extends well past their footprint, giving the Blaze 104 W a security on edge you wouldn’t expect in such a light, fat ski. The new Blaze 104 W is skinnier than its predecessor, but that’s not the only reason it can cut a tighter turn. Völkl made the Blaze 104 one of the first of its collection to be the recipient of a 4-Radius Drive sidecut; an interesting choice, as 4-Radius Drive exists primarily to engage the first few cm’s in a short-radius arc, …

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Salomon QST Stella 106


Salomon’s R&D department must be constantly fiddling with fibers, for every few years they re-arrange carbon, flax and basalt into different combinations that somehow out-perform the previous generation. In 2023, Salomon applied the same, end-to-end layer of C/FX’s latest incarnation that debuted three years ago in the QST 98. The 2022 Stella already had a Titanal mounting plate in its mid-section, a critical component in that its stabilizing influence extends beyond its borders. The fact that the skier has trouble defining the metal/non-metal border is a testament to just how substantial a weave of fabric can be, for the presence, or more accurately, the absence of Titanal is usually instantly detectable. In the Stella, the full-length C/FX factor is more dominant than the metal element, delivering a balanced flex stem to stern with a bite underfoot that won’t wilt in the face of boilerplate. Reinforcing edge grip on the 2024/25 Stella is a “double sidewall” comprised of injected ABS strips just over the sidewalls in the middle of the ski that focuses pressure where it counts and when it’s needed. (The idea of getting more direct pressure applied precisely to the edge is the central concept behind the monocoque design that launched the Salomon ski into immediate importance when it debuted in 1989.) The QST’s happen to all have square sidewalls – somewhat debunking the monocoque myth – which is one reason the Stella has been so good for so long.

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Fischer Ranger 102


When Fischer made the decision to be gender neutral in its 2023 Ranger ski line – meaning men’s and women’s models would use the identical recipe and even the same names – it did so by blending the constructions (and consequent behaviors) of its existing Ti and FR designs. As the Ti designs entailed metal (duh) and the more rockered FR skis did not, the blended design was almost certain to have Titanal in it, just not as much as the Ti’s of yesteryear. The 2025 Ranger 102 is a product of this design union, retaining the loose and smeary extremities of the old 102 FR, with a patch of .5mm Titanal in the binding zone that palpably augments its gripping power. Of its two parents, it takes after its maternal (non-metal) side, limiting its displays of muscular power to the critical area underfoot. If you loved the retired FR for its surfy attitude, you’ll be at least as enamored of the 2025 Ranger 102. Whether the Ranger 102 is a woman’s cup of tea depends on style and weight more than ability, although the Ranger 102’s soft flex is especially well suited to those making their first forays into sidecountry. The Titanal plate in its midsection sits astride a substantial beech and poplar core, so security underfoot shouldn’t be an issue for most female skiers. All things considered, the 2025 Ranger 102 amplified its forebear’s best assets without changing its fundamental character.

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