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PTO ReviewSki Boots

Rossignol Alltrack 80 W BOA GW

Alltrack family · 26/27BOAWalk Mode

Flex 80

Medium
60708090100110120130
SofterStiffer

Last Width

102mmWide (102mm+)

The Alltrack 80 W BOA is Rossignol's easy-going women's cruiser: a soft flex 80, a roomy 102mm high-volume last, a wool-and-Thinsulate liner, a lower-shell BOA dial, and a rear STEP IN lever that lets you drop your foot in without a fight. It is built around comfort first — warmth, width, and getting in and out — not around driving a hard turn. We have not skied this exact boot; the read here comes off the construction and off named bootfitter testing of its stiffer sister, the Alltrack 90 W BOA.

Where it gives ground is exactly where a softer, wider, warmer boot always does. Push hard or carry speed and flex 80 tops out early, and the women's cuff is comfort-shaped rather than a wall to drive against — a stronger skier will want the stiffer Alltrack 90 W BOA on the same last. Narrow or low-volume feet swim in the 102 shell and should look at the Alltrack 80 Pro on its narrower last instead. And the walk mode is lodge-and-parking-lot convenience, not a touring feature: there are no tech fittings and Rossignol publishes no range-of-motion figure. At $549.95, this is a boot for a specific skier — wide-footed, cold-footed, cruising the groomers, and glad to never fight a buckle again.

Strengths

  • +STEP IN entry drops the boot wide open — easy on, easy off, even with cold hands or stiff plastic
  • +Lower-shell BOA dial spreads instep pressure evenly and micro-adjusts one-handed
  • +Wool and Thinsulate liner runs warm for cold feet
  • +Wide, high-volume last is comfortable out of the box and forgiving to learn on
  • +Factory GripWalk sole walks more naturally than a flat alpine sole

Best For

Beginner-to-intermediate women who cruise the groomers and put comfort first, especially anyone with a wide or high-volume foot, a fuller instep or a stronger calf. It suits cold feet, and it suits anyone worn out by rental boots that pinch and buckles that fight back — the STEP IN lever and the BOA dial make getting in and dialed a one-handed job.

Limitations

  • Soft flex 80 tops out quickly once you push or pick up speed
  • Women's cuff is shaped for comfort, not support — it gives at the top
  • Wide 102 shell and a roomy heel pocket leave narrow feet swimming
  • Walk mode is après convenience, not touring — no tech fittings, no published range of motion
  • Rossignol publishes no weight, forward lean or walk-mode angle, so you cannot shop it on numbers

Not For

Narrow, low-volume feet or a narrow heel — a dial closes a shell but cannot shrink one, and this platform runs roomy through the heel, so that foot belongs in the narrower Alltrack 80 Pro. Also wrong for strong, aggressive or heavier skiers who drive hard: flex 80 is soft and the cuff support is modest, so it rewards cruising, not charging — the stiffer Alltrack 90 W BOA is the move on the same wide last. Wrong for anyone shopping a touring or backcountry boot: the walk mode is limited lodge convenience, and the alpine GripWalk sole carries no tech pins. And wrong for anyone whose current binding is not built for GripWalk — the boot and the binding have to be sorted together by a technician.

Common Questions

What bindings does the Alltrack 80 W BOA work with?
Its sole is factory GripWalk: the rubber blocks at the toe and heel have GRIP WALK and ISO 23223 molded into them, and that marking is the standard your binding has to accept. That means a binding whose maker declares GripWalk (ISO 23223) support, or a MultiNorm binding certified across sole standards; an alpine binding built for ISO 5355 soles alone will not take it, and that is a safety limit, not a preference. There are no tech pins, so it cannot run a pin or touring binding. Whatever it goes into, a certified technician has to match the binding to this sole and set and test the release values.
Is the Alltrack 80 W BOA a touring boot?
No. It has a Hike Mode walk position and a GripWalk sole that make walking around the lodge or a short bootpack easier, but that is convenience, not backcountry function. Rossignol publishes no range-of-motion figure for the walk mode, and a bootfitter testing its sister boot found the released motion very limited. There are also no tech fittings, so it cannot clip into a pin binding. If you want to earn your turns, buy a real touring boot.
Who is the 102mm HV last right for?
Wide and high-volume feet — a broad forefoot, a fuller instep, a stronger calf — plus anyone who runs cold, since the wool-and-Thinsulate liner is warm. The trade-off is a roomy heel pocket, so a narrow foot or a narrow heel will move around inside it no matter how far you crank the dial. If that is your foot, look at the Alltrack 80 Pro, which is the same flex on a tighter last. And treat 102mm as a relative figure, not a fitting: Rossignol measures it at one reference shell size, so only a proper fitting tells you what actually fits.
How stiff is a flex 80?
Soft, on the easy end of the alpine range and on Rossignol's own scale — flex numbers do not carry across brands. It bends without a fight, which is the point for a cruising or still-learning skier and forgiving on a long day. Drive it hard, though, and you reach the top of that flex quickly. A stronger or heavier skier who wants more support should step up to the Alltrack 90 W BOA on the same wide last.
PTO Team · 2026-07