Collection:
Ski Touring Boots
Canmore's most complete selection of ski touring boots — ultralight uphill performers, powerful all-mountain tourers, and freeride-capable hybrids from Atomic, Dynafit, Scarpa, and Tecnica. Whether you're skinning into the Wapta Icefield, threading couloirs in Lake Louise , or building your first backcountry kit for the Bow-Yoho traverse, the right touring boot is the piece that keeps you efficient on the climb and confident on the way down. Every boot in this collection features a walk mode, tech-compatible inserts for pin bindings, and a lugged sole for mixed terrain.
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Shop by Brand
- Dynafit — purpose-built AT boots spanning the ultralight Blacklight to the powerful Tigard 130, covering ski mountaineering objectives through hard-charging freeride touring.
- Atomic — the Backland XTD Carbon and Hawx Prime XTD lines bring proven alpine pedigree to an AT-capable package, with BOA closure and 74° of cuff rotation.
- Scarpa — Italian-engineered touring boots built around lasting fit and all-day comfort, from the versatile 4-Quattro GT to the performance-oriented 4-Quattro SL.
- Tecnica — the Cochise line brings Tecnica's downhill fit expertise into a touring-capable platform for skiers who won't compromise on descent performance.
Complete your backcountry setup
- Alpine touring bindings — tech and frame AT bindings compatible with the touring soles in this collection.
- Climbing skins — skins, tips, and accessories matched to your ski width for the skin track.
How to choose ski touring boots for the Canadian Rockies
The most important spec on a touring boot isn't the flex — it's the walk-mode range of motion. On short skin tracks or sidecountry laps, 55° is workable. On a sustained alpine day in the Rockies, the difference between 60° and 74° of cuff freedom accumulates over vertical kilometres and decides whether your legs are still sharp for the descent. We recommend a minimum of 60° for recreational touring; 70°+ for anyone planning full-day objectives.
Flex governs the way down. A 90–110 flex suits skiers who prioritize efficiency and ski moderate terrain; 110–120 handles most Rockies backcountry confidently; 120–130 is for aggressive descenders or skiers splitting time between the skin track and the resort. Last width runs 99 to 103.5 mm across this collection — if you've historically had cold toes or pressure points in touring boots, a 101 mm+ shell paired with a thermoformable liner resolves most fit problems before they become field problems.
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