For your primary all-mountain lens, target 20-35% VLT with a rose, copper, or amber tint. This range handles partly cloudy to sunny conditions—the most common mountain weather. If you frequently ski storms or overcast days, add a spare lens with 60-80% VLT. If you ski mostly bright sunny days at high altitude, consider a darker 10-18% VLT lens. The key insight: no single VLT covers all conditions, so plan for at least two lenses if you ski more than 10 days per season.
Ski Goggles · All-Mountain Ski Goggles
What VLT percentage should I look for in an all-mountain goggle?
Related gear types
If this answer nudged you toward a different style, these guides compare specs and trade-offs.

Spherical Lens Ski Goggles
$100 – $350
Goggles featuring horizontally and vertically curved lenses for superior optics and reduced glare.
dual-axis curved lenswider field of viewreduced peripheral distortion

Cylindrical Lens Ski Goggles
$40 – $200
Goggles with horizontally curved flat lenses offering a classic look at accessible price points.
single-axis horizontal curveflat vertical profilelower price point

Photochromic Ski Goggles
$120 – $350
Goggles with light-reactive lenses that automatically adjust tint to changing conditions.
auto-darkening lenseswide VLT rangeUV-reactive technology
More questions
- Are magnetic quick-swap lenses worth the extra cost?
- Should I get polarized lenses for all-mountain skiing?
- How do I know if I need an Asian/Low Bridge fit?
- Can I use my all-mountain goggles for night skiing?
