ISIA Speed Test Dates
When, Where and What is it?
December – 12th – Zinal – BASI
January – TBC
February – TBC
March – 11th & 12th – Pila – IASI
April – TBC
The ISIA Speed Test is the race that is part of the ski instructor qualification process for many nations. In BASI it is required for Level 4 ISTD. It replaced the Eurotest (formerly the CTT) after Brexit, and it’s now the international benchmark for top-level ski instructors.
Unlike the Eurotest, there’s no calibration system here — results are based directly on the times of reference skiers. For many, this means a more transparent process.
Who needs to take it?
- If you’re working towards BASI Level 4 ISTD, the ISIA Speed Test is compulsory.
- If you’re trying to get the ISIA card then you must pass the ISIA Speed Test.
- You can enter any ISIA Speed Test worldwide without needing to join another national association.
How to book
- Dates are released by individual associations but we will post any we are aware of on this page.
- Registration is made with the organising nation, once you sign up, you’ll get an invoice with account details to secure your spot.
- Each race is capped at 80 competitors. If numbers are higher, organisers must run additional courses.
What the test involves
The format
- A Giant Slalom set to FIS rules.
- You get one timed run, with the option of a second run on the day if needed.
- Miss the standard? You can come back and retake at another event — there’s no lifetime limit on attempts.
The course
- Designed to run at around 50 seconds (+/– 10%).
- Vertical drop: 250–400m.
Reference skiers
- At least two male racers with under 60 FIS points from the current or previous season.
- They set times at both the start and end of the field.
Qualifying times
- Men must finish within 12.5% of the reference time.
- Women must finish within 17.5%.
Example: If the average reference time is 51.68s, the cut-off is 58.14s for men and 60.72s for women.
Key differences from the Eurotest
- No calibration: qualifying is calculated straight from opener times.
- Flexibility: multiple venues worldwide, not just centralised tests.
- Transparency: easier to understand how times are set.