Best Men’s Burton Park Snowboards
Have you ever tried shopping for the best men’s Burton park snowboards and found yourself overwhelmed by all the options and price points? You’re not alone. With years of experience riding and reviewing Burton gear, I’ve broken down the top park boards in Burton’s 2024–2025 men’s lineup so you can confidently choose the one that fits your riding style and budget.
In this guide, I’ll explain what features you get at each price level and which Burton park snowboard is best for you this season.
Best Men’s Burton Park Snowboards
Good Company
Process
Blossom
Free Thinker
Men’s Burton Good Company

$579.99
Kicking this off at $579.99 CAD we have the Good Company,which replaces the former Kilroy Twin in Burton’s lineup. It’s a unisex-friendly park board that comes in a wide range of sizes—starting as short as 135cm—making it a great option for smaller riders, including lighter-weight men, women, or younger snowboarders.
Burton Good Company Camber Snowboard
The Good Company can best be described as a classic or traditional park board. This means it’s a true twin with a full-camber bend and a flex that’s on the softer side. It uses Burton’s Super Fly 800G wooden core, which has two species of wood that alternated between hard and soft woods. This creates a board that’s light with plenty of pop. It also comes with triax fiberglass construction and a sintered base.
At this price point you’re getting a solid park board that balances strength, speed, and pop for chasing hits and stomping landings anywhere in the terrain park.
Men’s Burton Process

$719.99 CAD
Next up at $719.99 CAD is the Burton Process. This is a cool board because it’s a park-to-all-mountain crossover that’s ideal for freestyle riders who want more versatility. If you’ve seen Mark McMorris ride slopestyle or big air, this is often his board of choice.
For the extra money you’re getting a step up to Burton’s Super Fly II 700G core, which is a bit more lighter and sturdier than the Good Company. It has a twin shape and flex but uses Burton’s PurePop camber bend, which has camber along most of the board’s edge to the outside of your feet. Then a flat section towards the contact point. What this flat section does is when the board is weighted, it allows for a little bit of early rise, to rock up at the contact point. This gives the rider a little bit of playfulness and a little bit of early rise to soften transitions from edge to edge.
Men’s Burton Process Camber Snowboard
Men’s Burton Process Flying V Snowboard
Alternatively, the Process also comes in Burton’s v-rocker bend. This means there is rocker in between your feet, then camber under your feet, back to rocker outside your feet to the tip and tail of the board. Between the two, the PurePop board will provide a more aggressive, dynamic, and hard-charging riding style for park riders who want to hit bigger jumps and features. While the Flying V will be easier to get on edge and steer, making it more mellow and relaxed. It will also be easier to press and spin in the terrain park as well as float in deeper snow conditions.
It also comes with Triax fiberglass and a sintered base. This is a great snowboard for that rider wants a board that’s as much fun to ride in the terrain park as it is to ride all throughout the mountain.
Men’s Burton Blossom

$739.99
Alright, jumping up to $739.99 CAD we have a Burton park board that was introduced in the line in 2022 and has become an instant classic–the Blossom. This is a rad park snowboard because for the extra couple of bucks you’re getting an upgrade to the Triax fiberglass, which now includes carbon I-beams to the bottom layer of fiberglass. This makes the board snappy and responsive.
You also get an upgrade to the base with Burton’s WFO Sintered Base. It’s a higher-quality sintered base. It holds wax better, but it also has wax impregnated into the base, which makes it faster and more durable. It’s true twin, centered-stance, full-camber; definitely stiffer than something like the Good Company.
This is a higher end park board, and with the extra stiffness and responsiveness this board can also ride a bit better outside of the park than your traditional terrain park board.
Men’s Burton Free Thinker

$839.99 CAD
At $839.99 CAD we have Danny Davis’ freestyle killer, this is the Free Thinker. It has more carbon in it and what carbon does for you is give the snowboard more energy, more snap, more liveliness. Instead of the I-beam, this has Burton’s Carbon Highlights, so there are carbon stringers that run along the bottom of the board from tip to tail. It has more carbon than the Blossom and anytime you take fiberglass out and and add carbon it’s going to make the board lighter. This board will have more energy, more pop and snap than the Blossom.
The Free Thinker also has deeper sidecuts than a traditional park board. This, I would say, is one of the best jumping boards in Burton’s park line. So, if you’re going fast and big and want something that is going to hold a really good edge. This is a great board from that guy who says “I’m only going to have one board, I’m going to spend most of my time in the park but I want something that can handle things outside of the park”, this is 100% a model that can do everything.
Best Men’s Burton Park Snowboards Comparison Chart
Model | Price (CAD) | Board Profile | Flex | Core | Base | Best For | Buy Online |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Good Company | $579.99 | Full Camber | Soft–Medium | Super Fly 800G | Sintered | Beginner–Intermediate park riders, jibbing, smaller riders | Buy from Burton |
Process | $699.99 | PurePop Camber / Flying V | Soft-Medium | Super Fly II 700G | Sintered | Versatile park & all-mountain freestyle | Buy from Burton |
Blossom | $739.99 | Full Camber | Medium–Stiff | Super Fly II with Carbon I-Beam | WFO Sintered | Intermediate–Advanced riders who want more pop | Buy from Burton |
Free Thinker | $839.99 | Full Camber | Stiff | Super Fly II with Carbon Highlights | WFO Sintered | Advanced freestyle riders, big jumps, all-mountain versatility | Buy from Burton |
If you’re unfamiliar with some of the terminology used in this post, you should read my ultimate guide to men’s snowboards.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What’s the best Burton snowboard for terrain park beginners?
The Good Company is a great entry-level option. It’s soft-flexing, affordable, and forgiving—perfect for learning tricks and progressing in the terrain park.
Which Burton board is best for big jumps and advanced freestyle?
That would be the Free Thinker. With its stiffer flex, deep sidecut, and carbon construction, it provides the stability and response needed for big air and technical park features.
Is the Burton Process good for all-mountain riding?
Yes! The Process is a great hybrid. Its twin shape and bend options (PurePop and Flying V) make it ideal for riders who want a board that performs well in both the park and across the whole mountain.
Should I get the camber or Flying V version of the Burton Process?
- Choose PurePop Camber if you want more pop, edge control, and stability at higher speeds.
- Go with Flying V for a looser, more playful feel with better float in softer snow.
What’s the difference between the Blossom and the Free Thinker?
Both are higher-end park boards with premium materials. The Blossom is a little more park-specific and has a balanced feel for jumps, rails, and transitions. The Free Thinker is stiffer, more powerful, and better suited for riders who want a freestyle board that rips outside the park too.
Alright, well thanks for checking out best park snowboard lineup from Burton for the 24/25 season. If you have any questions about any of the park boards I talked about in this article, drop a comment below. I’m on here every single day trying to answer your questions. I want to make sure you can get into some rad gear, but most importantly I want to make sure it’s actually going to fit you and your riding style. Grab yourself a new park board from Burton and get out and ride, because any day of riding is a good day of riding.
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