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Stöckli Laser WRT Pro

By PTO Team, Based on official Stöckli specs plus cited independent ski tests · Spec analysis + cited independent ski tests on this ski

Stöckli Laser WRT Pro 26/27 with WRT 12 GW binding on the D20 plate
Stöckli Laser WRT Pro, 26/27, system with WRT 12 GW binding.
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Playfulness
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The take

Race technology without a FIS license — a 67 mm carver that grips hard snow and rips slalom-to-GS turns, if you can drive it.

At the top of Stöckli's Laser line sits the WRT Pro, a 67 mm piste carver on a 119-67-101 mm sidecut that stays the same in every length, with radii from 12.3 m on the 158 to 16.0 m on the 178. It is built on a Race Core of beech and poplar - more beech than Stöckli's all-mountain cores, for stability - under a Titec Pro Titanal surface. Carbon Power Turn strips sit under the core around the binding area, tensioning through the turn and releasing at the finish for what Stöckli calls extra acceleration out of the arc. Stöckli does not publish the sheet count or a weight.

In an independent 2026 ski test the WRT Pro drew top marks for hard-snow grip and stability from the tester on the 166, who summed it up as a ski for people who want to only carve; a second tester on the 172 scored it lower but read it the same way - it rips, playful enough for tight slalom turns and opening into GS arcs with ease, and stable across the speed range. The 2025 test the year before reached the same expert-carver verdict on the identical geometry. 26/27 is a carryover - the article number is unchanged - so those tests ran on this exact ski.

The limits are the flip side of that precision. Forgiveness sat at the bottom of the card in that two-tester test - the WRT Pro asks for expert input and does not cover for a passive, backseat stance. Its terrain is narrow: versatility scored mid-pack and float sat near the bottom, and the reviews list groomers as its only recommended terrain. At 67 mm it is a hard-snow tool, not an all-mountain ski. Stöckli publishes no weight, so paper comparisons come up empty.

Within Stöckli's line the WRT Pro sits at the race end. One tier down, the Laser WRT shares this geometry but drops the Titec Pro Titanal surface and the Race Base for a Carbon Steering Control build - a step down from the Pro. The Laser WRT Pro Marco Odermatt Edition is the same geometry and the same tech, a collaboration edition Stöckli publishes no construction difference for. For short, snappy turns the narrower Laser SL (120-66-98, 11.0-14.5 m) is the specialist; for an easier, more accessible multiturn the Laser SC (120-70-102) even offers a comfort binding option. Off the groomers a wider ski like Stöckli's Montero AX is the tool - Stöckli itself calls the AX at home on any terrain, and this is not.

Sizing is straightforward: the sidecut does not change, so length sets the radius - shorter for a quicker rhythm, longer for stability in bigger arcs. We stock the 166, 172 and 178. It sells flat and pre-drilled for the D20 plate, or as a system with the WRT 12 GW binding on the WRT D20 plate, mounted and adjusted to your boots in our shop; the WRT 12 GW takes GripWalk soles.

Bindings we'd pair with it

Mount point: Sold flat and pre-drilled for the D20 plate, or as a system with the WRT 12 GW binding on the WRT D20 plate. Our pick: WRT 12 GW on the WRT D20 plate (the system option).

  • WRT 12 GW black on WRT D20 plateThe system pick

    Stöckli's system pairing on the pre-drilled D20 plate; the WRT 12 GW is compatible with GripWalk soles. It is the system variant of this product, not a separate purchase.

Stöckli's workbook also lists WRT 12 and, on the SRT plate, SRT 12 configurations for the Laser line. Mounting and setup are done in-shop by a technician.

Common Questions

Who is the Stöckli Laser WRT Pro for?
Expert hard-snow carvers and ex-racers who want race technology without a FIS ski. Stöckli's page lists no skier level, but independent testing places it at expert - it rewards a skier who drives the front of the ski, and punishes a backseat stance.
Is the Stöckli Laser WRT Pro a good powder ski?
No - it is a hard-snow carver, not a powder ski. At 67 mm underfoot its float sat near the bottom of the test card, and independent testers list groomers as its only recommended terrain. For soft snow a wider ski, such as Stöckli's Montero AX, is the tool.
What is the difference between the Laser WRT Pro and the standard Laser WRT?
Same 119-67-101 mm geometry, different build. The Pro carries the Titec Pro Titanal surface and the Race Base; the standard Laser WRT drops both for a Carbon Steering Control construction - a step down from the Pro.
How is the Laser WRT Pro different from the Marco Odermatt Edition?
On paper they are the same ski. The Marco Odermatt Edition carries the identical geometry and the identical technology set; Stöckli publishes no construction difference between them, so the difference is the collaboration graphics, not performance.
What lengths does the Laser WRT Pro come in, and which should I get?
The line runs 158, 166, 172 and 178 cm on one 119-67-101 mm sidecut, so length sets the radius - 12.3, 13.7, 14.8 and 16.0 m in order. We stock the 166, 172 and 178. Go shorter for a quicker rhythm, longer for stability in bigger arcs.
How much does the Stöckli Laser WRT Pro weigh?
Stöckli does not publish a weight for the Laser line - the dealer workbook prints none and stoeckli.ch leaves the row empty - and we do not quote third-party scale numbers in its place.
Does the Laser WRT Pro come with bindings?
Both ways. It sells flat and pre-drilled for the D20 plate, or as a system with the WRT 12 GW binding on the WRT D20 plate. The WRT 12 GW is compatible with GripWalk soles; mounting and adjustment are done in-shop by a technician.