Overview

Every brand, large and small, foreign or domestic, has to make a choice about how they want to build a ski.  Once they settle on a construction and the equipment to execute it is on premises, they tend to stay with it for the long haul.  Head’s wheelhouse construction could not be more fundamental or more sound:  while other brands have obsessed with making a cheaper, higher margin ski, Head has stayed with what it knows will never fail them: a stout wood core, two sheets of Titanal and carefully calibrated, pre-impregnated fiberglass to wrap it all up.  To those who might quibble some of Head’s skis are over-built, we would counter, wouldn’t you rather own a brand that errs on the side of excellence?

As an Austrian brand, Head has always placed a premium on race results, and its investments in this area have paid impressive dividends. In a sport where wins can be measured in the thousandth of a second, who comes out on top may appear serendipitous; when athlete after athlete is holding up a crystal globe recognizing a season of superiority, something other than serendipity is afoot.

While Head’s victories on the World Cup can’t be discounted, translating gold medals into dollars hasn’t been easy. The American market is not race-driven, to put it mildly.  Americans want to go where they wanna go, do what they wanna, wanna do; we’re all about freeride, dude!  Head, to its great credit, is first and foremost about technique.  Head was the first major brand to treat the Carving trend seriously and make it part of its identity.  Hooking into the top of a turn is part of the brand’s essential make-up. Even its recently retired off-trail Monster series had a baseline and tail design more like a carving ski than the typical smear sticks found in the Big Mountain genre.  It shouldn’t surprise that Head’s off-trail skis once languished in anonymity in the U.S.

Until the 2017/18 season, when Head unveiled the Kore series. Three years earlier, in 2014/15, Head had changed its entire women’s collection, centering the new series on its use of Graphene, carbon in a matrix one-atom thick. Since then, Graphene has spread through every product category, finally reaching the off-trail Kore collection.  Capitalizing on Graphene’s obscene strength-to-weight ratio, Head matched it with Koroyd honeycomb, a triaxial weave of carbon and ultralight Karuba wood to build the Kore’s core, topping it with fleece to minimize mass.

It’s no exaggeration to say the Kore series has catapulted Head into hitherto unknown sales territory for its All-Mountain, Big Mountain and Powder models. Head attempted another coup six years ago with a new lightweight series of system carving skis called V-Series (for its high taper ratio between tip width and tail width).  The V-Series used Graphene in a construction dubbed LYT Tech, applying the same materials used in Kore models to make exceptionally lightweight carving skis. Paired commercially with the Nexo-LYT boot – also built with Graphene and made to be as light as possible – Head pioneered a new generation of skis that don’t require as much mass to be stable at speed.

Head is betting heavily that the LIB trend isn’t a fad but a here-to-stay reality. The V-Series of (mostly) Frontside skis replaced the Instinct system skis that were built along the same Old School lines as the Monsters.  The Monsters have followed the Instincts into retirement, yielding their spot in Head’s line-up to the narrowest Kore, the 87.

The contrast between Head’s two carving collections, Supershape and Shape (née V-Shape), couldn’t be starker. When Head added Graphene to the Supershapes a few seasons ago, it used the weight savings to add more metal to the mix. The Shapes eliminate metal everywhere but in the edges. The Supershapes aim exclusively at skiers with elite skills; the Shapes hit every price point from coach to first class. The Shapes also have companion Nexo LYT boots, a high degree of product integration often seen in backcountry ensembles but not much elsewhere in the current market.

That Head should continue to offer two families of carving skis with contrasting personalities speaks to both the popularity of on-trail skiing in Europe and the brand’s long-standing commitment to carving as the cornerstone of the recreational market. Since the advent of shaped skis, no other brand has been as invested in the carving category, both financially and philosophically, as Head. Its 5-model Supershape series has been the benchmark for dual-track carving tools for a decade. For the 2025 season, the entire Supershape series has been significantly tweaked. While the key waist-width measurements remain the same for all, there’s significantly less flare at tip and tail, so the overall shape is more conducive to all-mountain skiing without losing its capacity to cut precision arcs on the hard stuff.

Four years ago, the Supershapes received a new electronic damping system called Energy Management Circuit (EMC). Unlike the KERS technology it replaced, EMC operates both fore and aft of the binding, where it intercepts and neutralizes shock waves when they hit 80Hz.  At speeds when many other skis begin to wobble, the latest Supershapes purr contentedly along.

Head is the only major brand to make an entire women’s collection from scratch, without reference to a single unisex template. Head refreshed its original Joy collection five seasons ago, beefing up their construction with more wood in the core to go along with its Graphene-infused glass. In 2021, Head created a new Joy at the top of the series, the aptly named Power Joy, that uses Head’s premium Worldcup Sandwich Cap construction, embellished with EMC to ensure it has no top end.  (The Joy collection received another significant re-design in 2024, which we’ll dissect below.)

Three years ago, the big news at Head was a series of small but significant tweaks to every one of Head’s popular Kore series, including the introduction of a new model, the Kore 111.  The main structural change was the elimination of synthetic Koroyd in favor of a full dose of Karuba and poplar in its now all-wood core. The flex pattern also was fiddled with, creating a stiffer stick in the thinner widths that will spend more time on hard snow, while the wider versions are softer and more responsive.

Another small change with a big effect was beveling the top edge, so the ski can slide sideways almost without resistance. On a Big Mountain model with the girth of the Kore 111, this makes a huge difference in how easy it is to swivel the bottom of the turn, a labor-saver that will prolong your powder day.

The Kore line comes in a slew of sizes, at 7cm increments, so skiers can find the length that’s tailored to their specifications. In 2023, Head added one more modification to all the Kores, a top coating of urethane, intended to improve the durability and appearance of the top sheet. Taken in toto, the various modifications made to all the Kore models, men’s and women’s alike, improved the skis’ snow feel to the point that, light weight aside, it’s indistinguishable from a well-made traditional ski.

Just last year, Head again updated its Joy series of women’s skis, introducing several key modifications that raised the performance ante.  The most obvious change from the Total Joys of yore was a new tip shape that shaved away 6mm, trimming the forebody and diminishing its propensity for digging in hard at the top of a turn. Its slimmer silhouette opened up its sidecut radius, which in turn expanded its receptivity to variable terrain and improved overall handling in deep snow.

While the change in forebody geometry had a profound effect on performance, the most significant innovation of the 2024 Joy series – which is unchanged for the 2025 season -was the plate that connected it to its integrated Tyrolia binding. What made the re-design of the Joy binding platform important was that it solved a puzzle that had plagued ALL system skis: the effect of boot sole length on ramp angle. All demo-style systems have moveable toes and heels with a fixed height that remains the same whether the boot going into it is large or small. There’s no way to avoid the fact that the ramp angle between heel and toe will be shallow on long boots and steepest for the short boots most likely to be used by a woman.

Head’s solution is a two-piece plate that automatically accounts for the variance in toe and heel height so that the platform maintains a constant .55o ramp angle regardless of boot sole length. Now every skier gets the performance advantage of being positioned in the ideal stance to retain balance and apply force efficiently.

The binding perched atop the new plate is from Tyrolia’s Protector series that includes a separate adjustment for lateral release at the heel.  Given the inherently heightened exposure of a woman’s knee to twisting forces, riding on a Protector binding offers an extra measure of protection.

The 2025 Season

Head has never wavered in its pursuit of the perfect carving ski, which in the U.S. market has been both a blessing and a curse. On the plus side, it never hurts to make the benchmark models in an important genre. On the downside, the cult of carving isn’t as popular here as it is in Europe, so the Supershapes have had a harder time gaining sustained traction with Americans.

The 2025 Supershapes have all made a major move to a more of an all-mountain mentality, losing some of their exaggerated sidecut and opening up their receptivity to a variety of turn shapes and snow conditions.  On the day we dedicated to trying out the latest e-Magnum, e-Rally and e-Titan, we had wonderfully mixed terrain and boot-top crud to play in. Taking the stability on edge that is their hallmark into the muddled world of crud was sheer delight. Unadulterated caving skis aren’t famous for their steering ease in deep snow – with good reason – but the new Supershapes are game changers.  The new Supershapes aren’t the only all-terrain skis that can carve, but they are indubitably the best collection of carvers at travelling off-trail.

e-Super Joy

Over the last decade, the Frontside field has evolved to such a degree that Head’s Super Joy, the consummate carving machine, now looks more like an outlier than the norm. Over that time span, the Super Joy’s construction and shape have undergone a series of major alterations; it’s still focused on carving up groomers and it still enjoys the unique advantages of having Graphene in its make-up, but the last two upgrades have altered the …READ MORE

e-Total Joy

No one can accuse the Head Total Joy of being a copycat model. Sixteen years ago, it debuted as the centerpiece of new series of women’s skis built from scratch, without reference to any unisex model. It was also the first time Head industrialized Graphene in a ski, a bold experiment that has paid off in spades. At this stage of the Total Joy’s evolution, Head engineers have figured out how to optimize this unique …READ MORE

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 …READ MORE

Kore 105

The Head Kore 105 is the perfect ski for our times. No, it doesn’t promote universal love and understanding among all people, but it does what it can, considering that it’s a ski. It’s not just that it’s the lightest ski in the genre, it’s how that light weight contributes to a quickness off the edge that makes the Kore 105 feel narrower than its actual dimensions. Another reason that the Kore 105 behaves like …READ MORE

Kore 111

The biggest problem with skis as wide as the Kore 111 is that their shortcomings start to show up as the powder “day” fizzles out around mid-morning. The Kore 111 could care less that the powder is kaput. Perhaps because Head replaced the Koroyd used in previous Kore cores with Karuba and poplar, the Kore 111 provides the feedback of a classic, wood and fiberglass chassis despite belonging in the same weight class as an …READ MORE

Kore 85 W

From a global performance perspective, Head understands that not all Kores will be treated equally. The Kore 85 W, as the narrowest of the clan, is expected to spend a good deal of its life on groomed snow, so it’s stiffened up accordingly. The Kore 85 W is nonetheless an off-trail ski by dint of its baseline and sidecut, so it has a special fondness for powder. An underappreciated Kore feature that makes it even …READ MORE

Kore 87

How can a ski as narrow-waisted as the Kore 87 come across as the most versatile ski in its wide-body family? After all, the Kore collection is 100% an off-trail creation; its avatar should be the Kore 111, not this string bean. The improbable polyvalence of the Kore 87 is partly explained by a sleight of hand Head pulled off in the make-up of the narrowest Kore models just three years ago. Taking advantage of …READ MORE

Kore 91 W

The Head Kore 91 W is either the best women’s ski for off-trail skiing, or the best off-trail ski for women, take your pick. The properties that make the Kore 91 W a great women’s ski and those that make it ideally suited for off-piste conditions are the same. The Kore 91 W got a shot in the arm three years ago when Head incorporated several new elements into the Kore design. First, it redecorated …READ MORE

Kore 93

The Kore 93 has been shattering preconceptions about what a lightweight, off-trail ski can do since its inception, and it’s only gotten better. In the most recent re-design, Head cut out the honeycomb Koroyd component in its core’s center section, replacing it with an all-wood mix of poplar and Karuba. Graphene remains the difference-maker, as Head can move it around the ski to change flex with virtually no effect on mass. Head tweaked its Graphene …READ MORE

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 …READ MORE

Kore 99

Just two years ago, Head invigorated its Kore series by making a handful of product changes that palpably improved every Kore model’s performance. You’d think the Austrian brand would have rested on its considerable laurels, but the following year it elected to add a urethane topcoat – like frosting on the proverbial cake – to help protect the top and sides from nicks and scratches. Lo, and behold, the addition of an end-to-end dampening layer …READ MORE

Supershape e-Magnum

Faithful followers of Realskiers’ ski selection methodology will notice that, strictly speaking, the Head Supershape e-Magnum doesn’t belong in the Frontside genre. Its 72mm waistline plants the Magnum – appropriately – in the Technical genre, where you’ll find the last remnants of the Carving category that once dominated sales in this country. I’ve overlooked this heresy because the Magnum has two Frontside siblings – the e-Rally and e-Titan – that are stars in the Frontside …READ MORE

Supershape e-Rally

Head was the first major ski brand to tie its fortunes to the success of the shaped ski revolution with its Cyber series.  I remember being a guest at a major dealer event in Konigsberg, Austria in the 1990’s when the president of Head’s subsidiary muttered the brand’s new mantra in a funereal monotone: “Cyber is carving, and carving is Cyber.”  You had to be there. Point being, Head went all-in on the carving craze …READ MORE

Supershape e-Titan

If you come from a race background, your favorite Supershape is likely to be the e-Speed or e-Magnum, but if you’re accustomed to a fairly wide all-mountain model, you’ll probably gravitate to the e-Titan. The common misconception that one needs 100mm’s underfoot to tackle off-piste terrain won’t survive contact with the e-Titan. Particularly when the off-trail goods are best in the trees or other tight quarters, a ski with a talent for tidy turns has …READ MORE