Ski Wax Temperature Guide
Find the recommended ski or snowboard wax type and color based on snow temperature.
Covers all major wax brands and temperature ranges.
Ski wax selection is driven primarily by snow temperature (measured at the snow surface, not air temperature) and snow type. Applying the wrong wax dramatically reduces glide, causes icing, or leads to no-glide at all on grip wax sections.
Temperature-based wax selection:
Waxes are color-coded by temperature range across all major brands:
Glide wax selection (for all ski types):
| Snow Temp | Wax Color | Condition |
|---|---|---|
| -20°C to -10°C (0°F to 14°F) | Cold blue / green | Cold, dry powder |
| -10°C to -4°C (14°F to 25°F) | Blue | Dry to slightly transformed |
| -4°C to 0°C (25°F to 32°F) | Violet / purple | Transitional |
| 0°C to +4°C (32°F to 39°F) | Red | Wet snow, spring conditions |
| Above +4°C (39°F+) | Yellow | Very wet, slushy |
Grip wax selection (classic skiing only): Grip wax goes in the “kick zone” — typically the middle third of the ski. The kick zone calculation:
Kick Zone Length ≈ 50–60% of ski length, centered under the binding
Temperature adjustment for snow age:
- Fresh, new snow: use the wax rated for your current temperature
- Old, transformed snow (days old): move one step warmer than temperature suggests — crystals are rounded and require stickier wax
- Wet spring slush: apply klister (a thick, sticky paste) instead of hard grip wax
Worked example: Snow surface temp: −6°C (21°F), snow is 3 days old (transformed) Base choice: Blue wax (−10°C to −4°C) Age adjustment: Move one step warmer → apply Violet/Purple as the outer layer
Fluorocarbon note: Many competition fluorocarbon waxes are now banned by FIS (Federation Internationale de Ski) in racing due to environmental concerns — hydrocarbon alternatives are now standard.