The snow started falling on the drive to Powder Mountain, and by the time we arrived, it was a full-on zero-visibility whiteout. That storm continued building in intensity all weekend long, burying us in our yurts under feet of fresh. I couldn’t have asked for better conditions to test Atomic’s newest member of the Backland family: the 2025 Backland 102. The lightweight, backcountry freeride ski was made for those conditions.
That was the first weekend I got to ride on these skis. I would become intimately familiar with them through the rest of the season, though. They became my go-to touring skis for most of my backcountry days through spring and into July.
I took them on daily tours at my favorite local ski spots, cat skiing, and hut-to-hut trips. I skinned in the Backland 102s, carried them on a pack, and skied everything from blower powder to summer slop.

These skis are hungry for big mountain backcountry terrain and long tours. There are some conditions where they aren’t ideal, but across the spectrum of snow and terrain I skied them on, the Backland 102s proved to be a fun and useful tool.
In short: The Backland 102 is the lightest-weight ski in my quiver at just 1,430 g per ski. They aren’t the lightest ski ever made, but for the level of control and playfulness they grant in deep powder and softer snow, the weight is impressive. It makes them ideal for big mountain backcountry objectives, as well as longer tours. But it works against them in hard chop and chunder. A quiver-of-one ski this is not, but for backcountry skiers who want to send it deep into the backcountry and for big mountain powder hunters, the Backland 102 is a precision instrument.
If you’re in the market for backcountry skis, check out GearJunkie’s guide to the Best Backcountry Skis.
Backland 102 Freeride Touring Ski Review
- Weight per ski: 1,430 g (@ 179 cm)
- Length: 164 – 172 – 179 – 186 cm
- Radius: 17.5 – 19 – 20 M
- Sidecut tail: 117.5 – 119.5 – 121 – 122.5 mm
- Sidecut waist: 101 – 101.5 – 102 – 102.5 mm
- Sidecut tip: 127 – 129 – 130.5 – 132 mm
- Core: Poplar and caruba
- Profile: Powder rocker tip, camber underfoot
Pros
- Extremely lightweight
- High-energy and playful
- Low carbon emission construction process
- Float extremely well in powder
Cons
- Not good for hard chop and chunder
Atomic Backland 102 Freeride Touring Ski Review
Weight

Construction

Shape & Profile
Atomic Backland 102: Performance

In Powder
In Chop, Crust

In Spring and Summer Slop

Uphill Travel

The Backland 102: Who Is It For?
