Snowboard Toe-Side Turns
You'll stop dreading toe-side initiation and start trusting the front of the board to pull you into a real, useful turn.
Committing to the toe edge with enough ankle, knee, and hip movement to steer the board cleanly without getting pitched forward.
Watch & Learn
Key Moments
Start the toe-side edge with ankle flex rather than only throwing the hips downhill.
Bring your center with the board so the toe edge can hold rather than skid away.
Let the board draw the turn instead of forcing an abrupt pivot.
What It Should Feel Like
- ✓Like pressing the shins into the boots while the board comes underneath you
- ✓The toe edge bites more from alignment than from brute force
- ✓The turn gets easier when you trust the edge long enough to finish it
Common Mistakes & Fixes
Kicking the board around with the back foot
Lead the edge change from the front foot and let the board steer as one piece.
Only bending at the waist
Add ankle and knee flex so the whole lower body supports the edge.
Snapping off the edge too early
Hold the toe edge until the board clearly comes back across the hill.
Practice Drills
Toe-edge J turns: traverse on the toe edge and finish one deliberate toe-side arc to a stop.
Three-count toe hold: after initiating the toe edge, count to three before releasing to train patience.
Front-foot steering drill: exaggerate guiding the turn from the lead foot so the back foot stops kicking out.
Prerequisites
Level Up Next
Your Progression
← Previous
Snowboard Heel-Side Turns
Level 2
Current
Snowboard Toe-Side Turns
Level 2
Next Up →
Snowboard Linked Turns
Level 3