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Marker Squire 11

Squire family · 26/27

DIN 311

35791113151821
Light / BeginnerHeavy / Expert

Brake Widths

90100110

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

Boot Sole

AlpineGripWalk

820 g per binding

Three release ranges sit next to each other here: the Squire 10 stops at 10, this one at 11, and the Griffon 13 carries on to 13. That single number decides more of this purchase than anything printed on the box. If a technician sets you above 11, liking the Squire 11 does not change the answer.

Worth knowing before you line it up against a rival: two of the things you would want to compare are not published. The step-in figure carries no stated baseline. The touring norm is left blank in both directions. Marker does give you the mass, 820 g per binding, but an honest comparison is still narrower than a spec sheet makes it look.

What is unambiguous is the part that matters most at the counter: Marker names the two adult sole norms this binding takes, by number. Bring the boots you actually ski.

Best For

Intermediate to advanced skiers whose release setting lands inside DIN 3-11, on Alpine or GripWalk soles, who want a low-stand-height all-mountain binding that is easy to step into.

Not For

Anyone a technician puts above DIN 11 - the Griffon 13 runs to 13 and is the step up. Anyone whose boot sole length falls outside 240-370 mm, or whose ski is too wide for a 110 mm brake to clear - there is no wider brake in this range. And touring boots: Marker does not list ISO 9523 for this binding, so nobody here can promise it fits.

Common Questions

What is the difference between the Marker Squire 11 and the Squire 10?
The Squire 11 adjusts across DIN 3-11 and is offered at 90, 100 and 110 mm. The Squire 10 stops at DIN 10 and is built only at 85 and 100 mm. The Squire 10 also sits lower and uses a Compact heel instead of the Squire 11 Hollow Linkage 2. Pick by the release range your technician sets you at, then check the brake clears your ski waist.
Do Marker Squire 11 bindings work with GripWalk boots?
Yes. Marker lists this binding for GripWalk soles built to ISO 23223 A, alongside alpine soles to ISO 5355 A. GripWalk compatibility is declared per binding model and never carries over between models, so check the specific binding rather than assuming.
Which brake width do I need for the Marker Squire 11?
The brake has to clear the waist of your ski, so pick the narrowest brake that still clears it - 90, 100 or 110 mm on this binding. A brake narrower than the ski will not close properly. Tell us your skis and we will match it.
Is the DIN number on the binding my release setting?
No. That number is a reference marking, not measured release torque. Your setting is worked out and verified on a calibrated bench with your actual boot. That is a shop job, not a number to read off a page.
PTO Team · 2026-07