Can You Train Figure Skating Off Ice on Inline Skates?

Can You Train Figure Skating Off Ice on Inline Skates?

The answer is yes. But the equipment matters more than most people realise.

Ice figure skaters have been asking this question for decades, usually during summer when rinks close, during periods of high ice cost, or when access simply isn't consistent enough to keep progressing. The question makes complete sense. Skating is skating. Why not skate off the ice when you can't get on it?

The honest answer is that you can, but only if you're using the right setup. Regular inline skates won't do it. Standard rollerblades are built for forward speed. They have no rocker, no toe pick, and no geometry designed around figure skating movement. Trying to train figure skating technique on them is like trying to play football in running shoes. Technically possible. Not actually useful.

What you need is an inline figure skating frame.

Quick answer

Yes, you can train figure skating off ice, but only on a properly designed inline figure skating frame with rocker geometry, a correctly positioned pick, and figure skating boot compatibility. Standard rollerblades will not work and will build habits that hurt your ice technique. With the right frame, edges, crossovers, footwork, spins, and jumps all transfer back to ice.

What makes an inline figure skating frame different

An inline figure skating frame is built around the same principles as an ice blade. It has a rockered wheel configuration, which means the wheels follow a curved profile rather than sitting flat. That curve is what gives you the balance point your body already knows from ice. It has a pick positioned at the correct angle for spins and jumps. And it mounts directly onto your figure skating boots, so your foot position, ankle support, and feel stay consistent with what you already train in.

This is not the same as putting wheels on a boot. The technical version of what "feels like ice" actually means is here.

The geometry is the difference between useful training and building habits that hurt your ice skating.

What actually transfers from ice to inline

The core of your technique transfers well. Edges work. Inside and outside edge differentiation is preserved because the rocker geometry replicates the blade profile closely enough for your body to feel the difference. Crossovers transfer. The hip mechanics, weight shift, and timing are the same. Three turns and basic footwork transfer. The muscle memory your body has built on ice applies directly.

Spins transfer better than most skaters expect, although the technique is slightly different. The pick angle is the key factor here. A correctly designed inline figure skating frame positions the pick so that your entry point matches ice.

Jumps transfer. You may have to adjust your technique slightly, but all jumps are achievable on inline figure skating frames. Many skaters report that inline training actually improves their jump precision because the surface requires more exactness. The pick contact is immediate and unforgiving, which builds cleaner technique.

What that transfer feels like in reverse, when you go back on the ice after a stretch of inline training, is covered here.

What doesn't transfer

The glide is different. Ice is extraordinarily slippery. Wheels on any surface create more friction, which means shorter glide and more frequent pushing. Your skating will feel more effortful per session than the same time on ice. That is not a flaw. It is actually good conditioning.

The surface matters significantly. Smooth indoor sports hall floors are the closest to ice in terms of feel and control. Outdoor surfaces introduce more variability and require harder wheels. EDGE includes dual durometer indoor wheels (82A outer, 85A inner) and dual durometer outdoor wheels (85A outer, 82A inner) precisely for this reason. The full surface guide covers where to actually skate.

Who this is actually for

Off ice inline training on a proper inline figure skating frame is genuinely useful for skaters who want to keep their technique active between ice sessions, skaters in areas with limited or seasonal ice access, younger skaters who can only access ice once a week and want to build more hours of quality movement, coaches who want to demonstrate technique outside the rink, and competitive skaters looking to extend their training volume without the physical cost of additional ice time.

It is not a replacement for ice training. It is a supplement that works. The skaters who get the most from it treat it as an extension of their practice, not a compromise.

EDGE

EDGE was built specifically around what ice figure skaters need from an off ice system. Four rocker axle positions for adjustable rocker configuration. Correct pick geometry for spin and jump training. Aerospace-grade 6000 series aluminium frame. Universal figure skating boot compatibility. Both indoor and outdoor wheels included.

It was designed by someone who spent decades on both ice and inline and knew exactly what was missing from every other frame available.

If you are an ice figure skater looking to train off ice, this is what the system was built for.

Explore the EDGE System or join the notification list for the May 2026 launch.

For a detailed breakdown of why wheel count matters, read our post on 3 wheel vs 4 wheel inline figure skating frames.

Last updated: May 9th