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Jones Mountain Twin Review

Last Updated: October 9, 2025 by Nate

Jones Mountain Twin Snowboard Review 2025-2026

The Jones Mountain Twin is the most reliably consistent board I know. Where I find the Standard the king of do-it-all boards, because it's a little more showy and shows more x-factor.

The Mountain Twin, on the other hand goes about its work with a devil-may-care attitude and an uncanny ability not to flinch, no matter what unexpected curve balls might be tossed its way.  

In this review, I will take a look at the Mountain Twin as an all-mountain snowboard.

As per tradition here at SnowboardingProfiles.com I will give the Mountain Twin a score out of 100 (based on several factors) and see how it compares with other all-mountain snowboards.

Overall Rating

Board: Jones Mountain Twin

Price: $579

Style: All-Mountain

Flex Rating: Medium (6/10)

Flex Feel on Snow: Medium (6/10)

Rating Score: 89.2/100

Compared to other Men’s All-Mountain Boards

Of the 32 current model all-mountain snowboards that we tested:

  • The average score was 84.6/100
  • The highest score was 93.4/100
  • The lowest score was 71.7/100
  • The average price was $572
  • WordPress Responsive Table

    ❄️ The Mountain Twin ranked 5th out of 32


    Overview of the Mountain Twin’ Specs

    Check out the tables for the Mountain Twin’s specs and available sizes.

    STYLE:

    ALL-MOUNTAIN

    PRICE: 

    $579 - BUYING OPTIONS

    Ability Level: 

    Ability Level Intermediate to Advanced

    flex:

    Snowboard Flex 6

    feel:

    snowboard feel stable

    DAMPNESS:

    Chattery Damp Bar 6

    SMOOTH /SNAPPY: 

    Smooth Snappy Bar 6

    Playful /aggressive:

    Playful Aggressive Bar 6

    Edge-hold:

    Edge Hold Hard Snow

    camber profile:

    Hybrid Camber

    HYBRID CAMBER

    HYBRID Camber - Jones's "Camrock"

    SHAPE: 

    DirectionAL TWIN

    setback stance:

    Setback 10mm (0.4")

    BASE: 

    Sintered | Jones's "Sintered 8000" base.

    weight:

    Felt normal

    Sizing

    LENGTH (cm) 

    Waist Width (mm)

    Rec Rider Weight (lb)

    Rec Rider Weight (kg)

    149

    244

    110-160

    49-73

    151

    248

    110-160

    49-73

    153W

    257

    120-170

    54-77

    154

    251

    120-170

    54-77

    156W

    259

    130-180

    59-82

    157

    254

    130-180

    59-82

    159W

    261

    140-190

    64-86

    160

    257

    150-200

    67-91

    162W

    263

    150-200

    67-91

    163

    260

    160-210

    73-95

    165W

    267

    170-220+

    77-100+

    168W

    269

    170-220+

    77-100+

    Who is the Mountain Twin Most Suited To?

    The Mountain Twin is best suited to... well everything really. OK, that's a cop out, but it truly is one of those boards that feels confidence inspiring pretty much anywhere doing anything. 

    For this reason it's best suited to riders with a versatile skillset, but want that one board quiver. Or it can be part of a quiver, best with a 3 board quiver, as that in-between board for days when you just want to have some variety - and you might have a powder specialist and a park specialist to compliment it. 

    It's not so easy to ride as to be beginner friendly - well not for most. There are always those riders who get on a board and can ride anything that will tell you that you can learn on anything (sometimes just naturally gifted, sometimes just forgetful in forgetting that they once struggles and sometimes just athletically strong/coordinated). But for most of us, this wouldn't be suitable for those just starting out. But it is fine for anyone at least at an intermediate level. 


    Mountain Twin DetailS

    Jones Mountain Twin Snowboard 2025 on snow testing

    O.k. let’s take a more detailed look at what the Mountain Twin is capable of.

    Demo Info

    Board: Jones Mountain Twin 2025, 157cm (254mm waist width)

    Date: February 15, 2024

    TESTING Conditions:

    Overhead: Some clouds but mostly sunny.

    Visibility: 100%

    °C °C +wind chill °F °F rounded °F +wind chill °F WC rounded °C | °F ° +wind chill
    Morning Temp: -8 -16 17.6 18 3.2000 3 -8°C | 18°F -16°C | 3°F
    Afternoon Temp: -7 -12 19.4 19 10.4000 10 -7°C | 19°F -12°C | 10°F
    cm inch in rounded cm inch
    24 hr snowfall: 0 0 0 0cm 0”
    48 hr snowfall: 0 0 0 0cm 0”
    7 day snowfall: 30 11.8110 12 30cm 12”
    kph mph mph rounded kph mph
    Morning Wind: 10 6.2150 6 10kph 6mph
    Afternoon Wind: 10 6.2150 6 10kph 6mph
    WordPress Responsive Table

    On groomer: Mostly hardpack with some icy patches. 

    Off groomer: Crunchy and hard with icy patches. 

    Set Up

    Bindings angles: +15/-15
    mm in mm in
    Stance Width: 560 22.0472 22.05 560mm** 22.05”
    Stance Setback: 10 0.3937 0.4 10mm 0.4”
    Width at Front Insert: 267 10.5118 10.5 267mm** 10.5”
    Width at Back Insert: 268 10.5512 10.6 268mm** 10.6”
    feet inches cm cm rounded
    Rider Height 6 0 183 6`0” 183cm
    pounds 81.6327 0
    Rider Weight 180 0 82 180lbs 82kgs
    Rider Boot Size: US9.5 (Adidas Response ADV)
    Bindings Used: Burton Malavita, size M
    grams pounds ounces lbs rounded oz rounded grams lbs & ozs
    Board Weight 2900 6.3933 0.3933 6 6 2900g/cm 6lbs 6ozs 6.2928
    Weight per CM 18.47 0.0407 0.0407 0 0.65 18.47g/cm 0.65ozs/cm 0.6515
    Average Weight per cm 18.64 0.0411 0.0411 0 0.66 18.64g/cm* 0.66ozs/cm 0.6575
    WordPress Responsive Table

    *based on a sample size of 300+ models that I’ve weighed in 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024 & 2025 models. 

    ** reference stance is 600mm but that's too wide for what I like. At 600mm, the width at inserts is 269mm front insert and 270mm back insert. 

    Powder

    Nothing on the day, but from previous experience and specs, it's a board that goes pretty well in powder. Perfectly fine in shallow powder - and can hold its own in deeper powder - all be it with a bit of a back leg workout. 

    It has a couple of things going for it. Firstly, some rocker tip and tail, all be it relatively subtle, secondly a small setback stance and thirdly a slightly longer nose than tail.  It also has a little bit of base contour, though again, pretty subtle. 

    Carving

    The Mountain Twin felt good when carving. All types of radius of carves too. Tighter, slower carves, longer more drawn out carves. It wasn't a carving monster, but it was consistently good for various carving types. It did have it's limits in terms of high speed, low angle carves, but for how good it is in everything else, the carving aspect was impressive.

    I was very close to giving it a 4 for carving for this reason, but because I give more weight to high speed carves in the scoring for carving, I settled on 3.5. If I was going to start giving scores with quarter scores (which I'm not, as tempting as it is!) it would be 3.75. 

    Turning

    Ease of Turning/Slashing: It's not an effortless turner, but it's overall pretty easy to initiate turns on and you can slash it around. 

    Maneuverability at slow speeds: Decently fast getting edge-to-edge at slower speeds, without too much effort, but not effortless. 

    Catchiness: Definitely not what I would call a catchy board by any means, but it's also not fully catch-free. 

    Speed

    It's not an out-and-out bomber but it can handle a really decent amount of speed before starting to feel unstable. Like carving I felt it was bordering on a score of 4. But ultimately I think 3.5 is a little more accurate. 

    Uneven Terrain

    Crud/Chunder: It wasn't unmovable in crud, but for board of this flex and for a relatively easy to ride board, it was quite impressive with how well it held things together in crud. Took a fair bit to shake it. And when it did encounter terrain that could buck it of course, it still had the maneuverability to make the necessary corrections. 

    Trees/Bumps: There aren't any areas where the Mountain Twin isn't capable and weaving through trees and moguls and other obstacles and riding the bumps over undulating terrain was no exception. It felt really good in these scenarios and like in every other area just seemed to be unflappable in terms of the feel of the board.

    If there was one word to describe this board, it would be consistent. 

    Jumps

    And just like everywhere else, the Mountain Twin didn't fail to feel good taking to the skies (or rather a few feet off the ground...  but still sky right?). 

    Pop: Not what I'd call oodles of pop buy decent enough and pretty easy to access, too. 

    Approach: Great mix of stability and maneuverability - as you'd expect from such a well balanced board. It can handle faster approaches that require stability to hold your line and trickier approaches that require more finesse and little adjustments to line or speed. 

    Landing: Ditto the approach. It's solid on bigger landings but it's not so solid that it's unforgiving of errors, when you get your landing a little off. And it's easy enough to speed check and maneuver, should you encounter any obstacles after your landing spot. 

    Side-hits: Like it is with everything else, it just works. It's not the board I'd go to if I wanted the most exciting, dynamic side-hit board I could find. I don't think of the Mountain-Twin underneath my feet when I'm dreaming of launching off epic side-hits, but you just can't fault it.

    Enough pop, easy enough access to it and maneuverability that whilst not up there with the most agile, is plenty to access those trickier take off points. And it's solid yet forgiving enough for those not so flat landing zones.  

    Small jumps/Big jumps: I'm not sure it even knows the difference, such is how consistent it feels across all of them. OK, that's an exaggeration, but it really does feel like it evens out the extremes and just remains solid no matter what it faces. It can take on any size jump, IMO, depending on your own skill level and confidence/risk aversion (or lack thereof). 

    Switch

    While often mistaken for a true twin (I mean with twin in the name I don't blame anyone) the Mountain Twin is a directional twin board with a nose slightly longer than it's tail and a small setback. 

    Nonetheless, it still feels really good riding switch - and because of where the inserts sit, it is a board you can center up on effective edge (you'll still have a little more nose than tail outside the contact points), and if you do, there really is very little difference in feel between riding in your normal direction and switch - even keeping the setback stance, there's not much difference. 

    Transitions aren't catch-free, but they're also nothing that requires any serious concentration.

    Spins

    Felt good on spins. It wasn't effortless to setup, you had to think about it, just a little bit, but with fairly easy to access pop and a great switch feel, allowing easy setups, landings and riding out switch (for 1s, 5s, etc).

    That, and a nice balance between being able to correct an under spin on the snow, to an extent, but without a tendency to over spin, provide it with, like it does for basically everything, a nice middle-ground. 

    Jibbing

    I personally like a nice soft flexing, easy going, easy turning, easy maneuvering, catch-free board for boxes, rails, etc. And while the Mountain Twin is relatively easy on those aspects, it's not enough for me to feel 100% confident on it - to try too much. 

    But I suck on jibs, really, considering I take almost every board I ride on them, so for the more jib-strong, the Mountain Twin should do fine. 

    Butters

    The nose and tail don't flex at the slightest bend, but it's also not hard to get it pressing. And the nose and tail feel pretty symmetrical to press. It's got enough stiffness in the tail and nose that it would be very hard to over-flex it - and when you find that spot, you can lock in - but they're certainly not stiff enough to make you work too hard either. 


    Score Breakdown and Final Verdict

    Check out the breakdown of the score in the table below.

    Factor Rating (/5) weighting total score weighted rounded score
    Weighted
    Powder 3 15 9 9/15
    Carving 3.5 10 7 7/10
    Turns 4 10 8 8/10
    Speed 3.5 10 7 7/10
    Crud 4 10 8 8/10
    Trees 4 10 8 8/10
    Switch 4 10 8 8/10
    Jumps 4 10 8 8/10
    Spins 4 5 4 4/5
    Butters 4 5 4 4/5
    Rails 3 5 3 3/5
    TOTAL (after normalizing):83 89.1566 89.2 89.2/100
    WordPress Responsive Table

    The Mountain Twin is unflappable. 

    It's like that person that everyone knows that you can take into any situation and they just seem confident and relaxed, like they've been there a million times before. They seem to be unphased no matter what life throws at them. 

    Whether you're lapping the park, playing around casually on the groomers, buttering finding side-hits or weaving through trees. Whether you find yourself (accidentally most of the time!) in a mogul field, having to survive on a steep icy face or after a storm. The Mountain Twin seems to just take it all in its stride.

    It does it without fanfare, as if any board can achieve the same, but deep down it has that quiet confidence to tackle anything you can throw at it. 


    More Info, Current Prices and Where to Buy Online

    To learn more about the Mountain Twin, or if you're ready to buy, or if you just want to research prices and availability, check out the links below 

    To learn more about the Mountain Twin, or if you're ready to buy, or if you just want to research prices and availability, check out the links below
    ℹ We receive a small commission if you order through the links below - no extra cost to you, of course and we really appreaciate the support. More info



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    >>Jones Mountain Twin 2026 at jones.com
    WordPress Responsive Table

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    WordPress Responsive Table


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    >>Jones Mountain Twin 2026 at rei.com
    WordPress Responsive Table


    >>Jones Mountain Twin 2026 at jones.com
    WordPress Responsive Table


    >>Jones Mountain Twin 2026 at blue-tomato.com
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    WordPress Responsive Table

    Jones Mountain Twin 2026

    To check out some other all-mountain snowboard options, or to see how the Mountain Twin compares to others, check out our top rated all-mountain snowboards by clicking the button below.

    Our Top Rated Men's All-Mtn Snowboards
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    >>Past seasons Mountain Twin review archives

    Filed Under: 2017 Snowboard Reviews, 2018 Snowboard Reviews, 2019 Snowboard Reviews, 2020 Snowboard Reviews, 2021 Snowboard Reviews, 2022 Snowboard Reviews, 2023 Snowboard Reviews, 2024 Snowboard Reviews, 2025 Snowboard Reviews, 2026 Snowboard Reviews, Current Model, Jones, Men's All Mountain Snowboard Reviews Tagged With: jones mountain twin 2024-2025, jones mountain twin 2025-2026, jones mountain twin snowboard review

    About Nate

    Nate is passionate about and loves learning new things everyday about snowboarding, particularly the technical aspects of snowboarding gear. That, and becoming a better rider and just enjoying and getting the most out of life.

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