The International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) acquired the Freeride World Tour this month. And the future of freeride skiing and snowboarding is looking bigger and brighter than ever.
The FIS is the largest winter international federation in the world and is recognized by the International Olympic Committee. The Freeride World Tour is a worldwide circuit of freeride ski and snowboard competitions. It’s where skiers and riders face off on some of the gnarliest alpine terrain that ski resorts have to offer.
Now, the two organizations are joining forces. They’re merging to bring some of the most exciting snowsports in the world onto a much larger stage.
Freeride World Tour and FIS: Aligning Snowsport Disciplines

FIS’ acquisition of the Freeride World Tour is big news that has a lot of people feeling very hopeful about the future of freeride skiing and snowboarding.
Because FIS is a sports federation with a global pool of resources, it has a lot to bring to the Freeride World Tour’s table. It’s aiming to align snowsport disciplines under a single governing body. And it wants to offer these sports more power to develop on the global stage.
“Integrating FWT will see FIS add one of the most exciting, dynamic winter sports competition formats to its portfolio,” said Johan Eliasch in a press release announcing the acquisition. “FWT brings a highly professional tour that offers breathtaking action and an entirely new element of skiing and snowboarding to FIS.”
The Freeride World Tour is a big deal in the world of professional ski and ride competitions. There are (on average) five top-level events that take place throughout the ski season and over 200 “development events.”
The Tour currently includes over 6,000 licensed athletes that compete in three different tiers: Challenger, Qualifier, and Junior. Athletes can work their way up to the top level. Currently, over 1 million viewers tune in to watch Freeride World Tour events every year.
Freeride Skiing and Riding: Olympic Games-Bound?
