| 75 | | $210 | Climbing skins inherently strike compromises; winner of our top award, it balances competing demands better than any other |
| 72 | | $210 | For skilled skinners and efficiency hounds on cold snow there are no better skins available |
| 70 | | $210 | You get exceptional glide, but pay for that with durability, grip, and some icing resistance |
| 70 | | $235 | Ultra light, low-maintenance, high performance skins for discerning users in specific applications |
| 67 | | $225 | The snow contact surface is perfectly tuned, while the glue is especially tenacious and the tail clip is a little moody, at best |
| 61 | | $190 | If you have Dynafit skis, these are the obvious and excellent choice of skins |
| 59 | | $200 | What we see so far is great, but we have some nagging doubts we’ll address with some more skiing |
| 54 | | $180 | Strikes a careful balance that is just right |
| 53 | | $195 | Threading the needle of compromise essential to climbing skins, this BD pair offers high end performance at a reasonable price |
| 51 | | $185 | Super light products are prone to performance and durability issues; grip and glide are average, but glue integrity and durability suffer |
| 50 | | $194 | Skins that don’t necessarily glide as well as the branding suggests, but likely work well overall for a significant portion of the market |
| 49 | | $170 | Rugged, good gripping skins for those with limited dollars and desiring a proven product over maximum performance |
| 48 | | $200 | If you like new things for their own sake, or you hate replacing and maintaining gear, you might dig these |