Technically possible but not recommended. AT frame bindings are heavier, more expensive, and have higher stack height than resort bindings with no benefit on a solid board. If you ride both resort and backcountry, mount pucks to your splitboard and standard bindings to your resort board, or use a quiver-of-one approach with a splitboard for everything.
Snowboard Bindings · Alpine Touring Frame Bindings
Can I use AT frame bindings on a regular (non-split) snowboard?
Related gear types
If this answer nudged you toward a different style, these guides compare specs and trade-offs.

Alpine Ski Bindings
$80 – $500
Standard downhill ski bindings with DIN-certified release for resort skiing.
DIN-certified release mechanismToe and heel piece designAdjustable release values

Tech/Pin Bindings
$300 – $900
Lightweight touring bindings using pin-clamping toe pieces for efficient uphill travel and backcountry skiing.
Pin-clamping toe pieceTech-compatible boot requiredRotating heel piece
More questions
- Do I need special boots for AT frame bindings?
- How long does it take to transition from walk mode to ride mode?
- Are AT frame bindings safe for steep, consequential terrain?
- Why are AT frame bindings so much heavier than regular bindings?
