FAQ
Common questions
Should I buy figure skates or recreational skates to start?
Recreational (soft-boot) skates for almost everyone. Figure skates have a painful 10–15 hour break-in and are designed for jumps and spins, not casual gliding. Unless you're taking formal figure skating lessons, recreational skates are more comfortable and easier to learn on from day one.
How do I know what size ice skates to buy?
Ice skate sizes run 1.5–2 sizes below your street shoe. If you wear a men's size 10, start with a size 8–8.5 skate. Always use the manufacturer's sizing chart, since brands vary. When in doubt, try on in-store or order two sizes and return the one that doesn't fit.
Do new skates need to be sharpened?
Most skates from real brands come pre-sharpened and are ready to skate. After 10–15 hours of use, get them sharpened at a rink for $8–15. You'll notice when it's needed: turns feel harder and you sense you're slipping more than usual.
Is ice skating hard to learn?
The first session is humbling. Within three or four sessions, most people can glide, turn, and stop with reasonable confidence. The basic forward-skating skill curve is gentle; jump and spin skills take structured lessons and years of practice.
What should I wear ice skating?
Layers you can remove, since you'll warm up faster than you expect. Athletic pants (not jeans, which are miserable when wet from a fall), a light jacket or hoodie, and thin athletic socks. Thick ski socks fill the boot wrong and reduce ankle feel.
Can I use a bike helmet for ice skating?
Technically no: bike helmets are rated for single-impact and aren't certified for ice skating's slip-and-fall impact pattern. A multi-sport helmet (ASTM certified for ice skating) or a hockey helmet is the correct call.