Technically yes, if you have hybrid-sole AT boots and GripWalk-compatible bindings. However, it's not ideal. AT boots are less durable on hard resort snow, their walk mode mechanisms can develop play over time, and they don't provide the same edge-to-edge precision as alpine boots for carving groomers. If you ski 30+ resort days per year plus touring, consider having separate setups. If you're a casual resort skier who tours frequently, a single pair of hybrid AT boots can work fine.
Ski Boots · Alpine Touring (AT) / Backcountry Ski Boots
Can I use my AT boots for an entire resort season?
Related gear types
If this answer nudged you toward a different style, these guides compare specs and trade-offs.

Freeride / Big Mountain Ski Boots
$450 – $1100
Powerful boots built for aggressive off-piste skiing in deep snow and steep, technical terrain.
Stiff flex (120-150)Wider last (98-104mm)Often includes walk mode

Hike & Ride / Walk-Mode Resort Boots
$350 – $850
Resort-oriented boots with integrated walk mode for easy hiking to sidecountry terrain and resort exploration.
Walk mode (40-55° range)Near-resort stiffness (100-130 flex)GripWalk soles

Telemark Ski Boots
$300 – $750
Boots designed for free-heel telemark skiing with flexible bellows and 75mm or NTN binding compatibility.
Flexible bellows under ball of foot75mm duckbill or NTN sole compatibilityHigher cuff for support
More questions
- Can I use AT boots with my regular alpine bindings at the resort?
- How much walk range of motion do I really need?
- Why are AT boots so much more expensive than alpine boots?
- Should I size AT boots differently than my alpine boots?
