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Marker Squire 10

Squire family · 26/27

DIN 310

35791113151821
Light / BeginnerHeavy / Expert

Brake Widths

85100

Choose a brake equal to or slightly wider than your ski waist

Boot Sole

AlpineGripWalk

815 g per binding

Marker is specific about who this is for, and the two things it publishes point the same way. The prose calls it a starting point for newcomers to freeriding and freestyle - new to that terrain, not new to skiing - and the spec table rates the ability level intermediate to advanced. Read together: someone who can already ski, stepping into the park and off-piste. What decides it for you is still the release value a technician sets you at.

One thing Marker leaves unpublished is worth naming, because it is exactly what a buyer at this price would want to weigh: the housing materials for the toe and heel are not disclosed anywhere. We would rather hand you that gap than fill it with a guess about what a cheaper binding gives up. The mass it does publish is 815 g per binding.

The rest is arithmetic you can finish before preference enters it: check the release range, then check the brake. Either one can end the conversation.

Best For

Skiers new to freeride and freestyle whose release setting sits inside DIN 3-10, on Alpine or GripWalk soles, mounting skis narrow enough for an 85 or 100 mm brake.

Not For

Anyone on skis too wide for a 100 mm brake - the Squire 11 goes to 110 and this one simply does not. Anyone a technician sets above DIN 10. And touring boots: Marker does not list ISO 9523 here, so it is not something we can promise.

Common Questions

What is the difference between the Marker Squire 10 and the Squire 11?
Brake width and heel are the differences you can act on. This one is built at 85 and 100 mm; the Squire 11 adds a 110 mm brake. The heels differ too, Compact here against Hollow Linkage 2 on the Squire 11. On release range Marker's own catalog and website do not agree about where the Squire 11 tops out, so let the number a technician sets you at decide, not the model name. If your skis need a 110 mm brake, that settles it anyway.
Do Marker Squire 10 bindings work with GripWalk boots?
Yes. Marker lists this binding for GripWalk soles to ISO 23223 A, along with alpine soles to ISO 5355 A. GripWalk support is declared per binding model and does not carry across a brand line, so confirm it on the exact binding you are buying.
What boot sole lengths does the Marker Squire 10 fit?
Marker gives a boot sole length range of 240 to 360 mm. Your boot sole length is printed on the side of the boot heel in millimeters - bring the boots in and we will confirm the fit before mounting.
Is the Marker Squire 10 strong enough for an aggressive skier?
That is a question for a technician, not a spec sheet. The binding adjusts between DIN 3 and 10. Whether your correct setting lands inside that range is something a technician works out on a calibrated bench with your own boot. If it comes out above 10, you need a different binding.
PTO Team · 2026-07