onenerdykid
Active member
A competent boot-fitter will be able to assess your foot shape, foot volume, and ankle flexibility and arrive at a few options that will most likely work very well for you. From there, your foot will tell you what it likes the best. A boot-fitter can/will make adjustments to the fit to dial the boot in to your unique foot shape.
If your boots fit you perfectly and are not worn out (toe & heel thickness are at the DIN norm), wear them. Boots typically last between 100-120 days of skiing, not calendar days but actual days on the slopes. So if you ski 20 times a year, the principles of mathematics say that your boot will roughly last 5-6 years if you don't abuse or beat the hell out of them. If you ski 100 days a year, you are probably buying new boots every year or so. Either way, by then your boots will look and feel pretty beat.
If your boots fit you perfectly and are not worn out (toe & heel thickness are at the DIN norm), wear them. Boots typically last between 100-120 days of skiing, not calendar days but actual days on the slopes. So if you ski 20 times a year, the principles of mathematics say that your boot will roughly last 5-6 years if you don't abuse or beat the hell out of them. If you ski 100 days a year, you are probably buying new boots every year or so. Either way, by then your boots will look and feel pretty beat.