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  • Deck Widths Explained: How to Choose and Compare Fingerboard Sizes
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June 27, 2026Decks

Deck Widths Explained: How to Choose and Compare Fingerboard Sizes

A reference for buyers comparing deck widths, upgraders, and deck hunters evaluating used listings where specs are often missing.

Kingpin Editorial·8 min read·Setup Guides
Photo: Matěj Baťha / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Buy on Kingpin Market

A wooden fingerboard deck shown on a plain surface.
Photo: Matěj Baťha / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)
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  • How fingerboard deck width works
  • 29mm: narrow
  • 32mm: a widely documented standard
  • 33mm / 33.3mm / 33.6mm: mid-size
  • 34mm: a commonly used current width
  • 36mm and wider: wide setups
  • How shape interacts with width
  • Truck compatibility and axle overhang
  • Identifying deck width when specs are missing from a listing
  • How widths have trended over time
  • How to think about width when shopping used listings

A reference for buyers comparing deck widths, upgraders, and deck hunters evaluating used listings where specs are often missing.

How fingerboard deck width works

Fingerboard deck width is measured in millimeters across the widest point of the board, typically at the center between the nose and tail kicks. Width is one of the primary specs listed by pro-tier brands and one of the most commonly missing specs in used marketplace listings. Knowing how width categories are described helps buyers search more accurately and ask sellers the right questions.1, 2, 3

Documented deck widths, to scale
  • Narrow — the earlier-era width29mm
  • A widely documented standard32mm
  • Mid-size33.3mm
  • A commonly used current width34mm
  • Wide setups36+mm
010203040mm

Drawn at real-world size on most screens — hold a deck up to the display to compare.

Width categories at a glance

29mm

Narrow

Earlier-era; less common used

32mm

Standard

Long-standing, widely stocked

33mm

Mid-size

The 33.3–33.6mm sweet spot

34mm

Modern default

Common current pro width

36mm+

Wide

Wide trucks harder to find

  • 01Width is measured in millimeters (mm) at the widest point across the deck
  • 02Width is distinct from length — most pro decks share similar length ranges, but width varies across brands and molds
  • 03The same brand may offer multiple widths from the same shape/mold
  • 04Width affects truck compatibility: truck axle width should generally match deck width

For buyers

Always ask for deck width in millimeters when a listing does not state it. A ruler or calipers photo next to the widest point of the deck is the most reliable confirmation.

For sellers

Measure and list deck width in millimeters for every deck listing. 'Wide' or 'standard' without a number leaves buyers unable to match trucks.

29mm: narrow

29mm is documented as an available width by brands including Berlinwood (via Blackriver Shop) and Teak Tuning, among others. Community discussions describe 29mm as associated with faster or lighter flip feel, though these descriptions reflect personal preference and are not universal. It is a narrower, earlier-era width that several brands still make in popsicle shape — named examples include Teak Tuning's 'The Classic' (29mm × 96mm), DK Fingerboards' 29mm popsicle blank, FlatFace's G15 in 29mm, and Boardkennel's 'Blind Popsickles'. On the used market it is generally less common than 32–34mm.3, 4, 5, 6, 7

  • 01Documented by Berlinwood (via Blackriver Shop), Teak Tuning, DK Fingerboards, and FlatFace
  • 02Named 29mm molds include Teak Tuning 'The Classic' (29mm × 96mm), DK's 29mm popsicle blank, FlatFace G15 (29mm), and Boardkennel 'Blind Popsickles'
  • 03Community-described as narrower feel with faster rotation — personal preference varies
  • 04Generally less common in current used marketplace inventory than 32–34mm

For buyers

A 29mm deck requires trucks matched to that width. Confirm truck width before purchasing a 29mm setup, as 32mm or 34mm trucks would overhang the deck edges.

For sellers

State 29mm explicitly in the listing title and description. Buyers searching for this width will not find the listing if width is omitted.

32mm: a widely documented standard

32mm is described by multiple brands and community guides as a widely used starting point and a broadly available width category. Berlinwood, Teak Tuning, Blackriver trucks, and other sources document 32mm as a standard offering. Community discussions commonly describe 32mm as a natural fit for a range of finger placements, though this varies by individual.3, 1, 2, 8, 7

  • 01Documented by Berlinwood, Teak Tuning, DK Fingerboards, and Blackriver trucks
  • 02Widely available in both new and used listings
  • 03Compatible with 32mm trucks
  • 04Popsicle shape is a common shape at this width — other shapes also exist

For buyers

32mm is a well-documented width with a broad range of available trucks and accessories. Confirm truck width matches 32mm if buying deck and trucks separately.

For sellers

32mm is a searchable term for many buyers. Include it in the listing title alongside any shape and graphic names.

33mm / 33.3mm / 33.6mm: mid-size

Several brands offer decks in a mid-size range around 33mm to 33.6mm, with the exact figure varying by brand: Berlinwood documents 33.3mm, FlatFace documents 33.6mm (its G16 shape, which it notes works with both 32mm and 34mm trucks), and Five Luck documents 33.3mm and 33.5mm, among likely others. Because the precise measurement differs between makers, buyers should confirm the exact number rather than assuming a deck labeled 'mid-size' or 'between 32 and 34' matches any specific brand's product.3, 6, 9, 1

  • 01Berlinwood documents 33.3mm; FlatFace documents 33.6mm (G16); Five Luck documents 33.3mm and 33.5mm
  • 02Other brands offer similar mid-size widths — the exact figure (33.3 / 33.5 / 33.6mm) varies by maker
  • 03FlatFace notes its 33.6mm G16 pairs with either 32mm or 34mm trucks
  • 04May appear in listings as '33mm,' '33.3mm,' '33.6mm,' or informally as 'between 32 and 34'

For buyers

Ask for a precise measurement if a listing describes a deck as 'mid-size' or a width around 33mm. A 33.3mm and a 33.6mm board are not identical, so confirm the exact number and truck compatibility.

For sellers

If the deck is 33.3mm, 33.5mm, or 33.6mm, state the exact measurement. Do not round to 32mm or 34mm without confirming the actual width.

34mm: a commonly used current width

34mm is documented by Blackriver trucks (as a compatible truck width), by Teak Tuning, and by multiple community guides as a currently common pro-setup width. Community discussions frequently describe 34mm as a broadly used width in current setups, though individual preferences vary. Teak Tuning's published width guide identifies 34mm alongside 32mm as one of the two most commonly referenced sizes.10, 1, 8, 2

  • 01Documented by Blackriver trucks (34mm listed as a truck width option)
  • 02Documented by Teak Tuning as a current standard offering
  • 03Widely referenced in community guides as a common current-era pro width
  • 04Compatible with 34mm trucks

For buyers

34mm is a well-stocked width for both decks and trucks. Verify truck width independently rather than assuming a deck listed without specs is 34mm just because it appears to be current-era.

For sellers

State 34mm explicitly in listings. Include a measurement photo if possible to help buyers compare without messaging.

36mm and wider: wide setups

36mm is documented as a width option by Berlinwood (via Blackriver Shop) and Blackriver trucks, and some brands go wider still: Caramel documents named decks at 38mm (such as 'Gutter Frog' and 'Clown') and 40mm (such as 'Fear' and 'Godzilla'). Goo LTD also makes named molds in this wider territory — its 'Wide Life Crisis' mold is named for a wider profile, though Goo does not publish an exact width. Community references to 'wide setups' generally mean anything wider than 34mm, but the cutoff is not standardized, so the exact millimeter measurement matters more than the 'wide' label.3, 10, 11, 12, 1

  • 01Berlinwood documents 36mm as a distinct catalog width; Blackriver trucks lists 36mm as a truck width
  • 02Caramel documents wider decks above 36mm — 38mm ('Gutter Frog', 'Clown') and 40mm ('Fear', 'Godzilla')
  • 03Goo LTD makes named wider molds (e.g. 'Wide Life Crisis'), but its product pages do not publish an exact width — ask the seller to measure
  • 04Above ~36mm, compatible trucks are harder to find — confirm a wide truck exists for the exact width before buying a deck

For buyers

Wide decks require wide trucks. Confirm truck width is compatible with the exact deck measurement (36mm, 38mm, 40mm, etc.) before buying components separately, since wide trucks are less common than 32–34mm.

For sellers

State the exact width in millimeters for any wide setup. 'Wide' alone is not a spec. Include a measurement photo if the deck is above 34mm.

How shape interacts with width

Deck shape (concave, nose and tail kick angle, wheelbase) is documented separately from width by most pro brands, but the two specs interact in how a setup feels. Concave refers to the curve across the width of the board — low concave has a flatter cross-section, high concave has a more pronounced curve. Wheelbase is the distance between mounting holes and affects stability. A deck at the same width can feel different depending on its concave and wheelbase, so buyers comparing listings by width alone may miss meaningful differences.3, 13, 14

  • 01Concave: low (flatter), medium, or high (more curved) — documented by Berlinwood and others
  • 02Wheelbase: distance between mounting holes — longer wheelbase is generally described as more stable
  • 03Kick angle: the steepness of the nose and tail — affects pop feel
  • 04Shape (e.g., popsicle) describes the overall outline — popsicle is symmetrical nose and tail
  • 05Two decks at the same width may have different concave, wheelbase, and kick, affecting feel

For buyers

When comparing two decks at the same width, ask about concave level, wheelbase (if documented), and kick angle. A side profile photo is the most useful photo for evaluating concave and kick without having the board in hand.

For sellers

If concave level is known (low / medium / high), include it in the listing description alongside width. A side profile photo showing the concave curve helps buyers evaluate remotely.

Truck compatibility and axle overhang

The generally recommended practice is to match truck axle width to deck width so that wheels sit close to the edge of the deck without overhanging significantly. Blackriver trucks are documented at widths of 29mm, 32mm, 34mm, and 36mm, which correspond to the deck widths they document for Berlinwood. When truck width does not match deck width, the axle extends past the deck edge or sits inset from it, which some riders prefer and others do not — personal preference applies here, but the mismatch should be disclosed in a listing.10, 3, 15

  • 01Standard guidance: match truck width to deck width in millimeters
  • 02Blackriver trucks documented at 29mm, 32mm, 34mm, 36mm — matching Berlinwood width catalog
  • 03Axle overhang (truck wider than deck): wheels extend past the deck edge
  • 04Inset trucks (truck narrower than deck): wheels sit inside the deck edge
  • 05Either configuration is used by some riders — disclose the mismatch in any listing

For buyers

When buying a deck and trucks separately, confirm both widths before purchasing. Buying a 34mm deck with 32mm trucks — or vice versa — is a mismatch that should be intentional, not accidental.

For sellers

If a complete listing mixes deck and truck widths that do not match, disclose both measurements and note that it is a mixed-width setup. Do not list just one of the two widths.

Identifying deck width when specs are missing from a listing

Many used marketplace listings do not state deck width. Without a measurement, buyers can ask the seller for a caliper or ruler photo across the widest point of the board. Comparing the deck width to truck axle width in photos can also suggest the approximate size, since matched setups commonly show the axle ending near the deck edge. However, visual estimation from photos is not a substitute for a confirmed measurement, and buyers should not assume a width based on appearance alone.3, 1, 2

  • 01Ask the seller for a ruler or calipers photo across the widest point of the deck
  • 02Truck axle position relative to deck edge can suggest approximate matching — but is not a confirmed spec
  • 03Brand catalogs (Berlinwood, Teak Tuning, DK, etc.) can help narrow down width if the mold or graphic is identified
  • 04Do not assume deck width from truck brand alone — the same truck brand offers multiple widths

For buyers

If you identify the deck brand and mold from a listing photo, check the brand's catalog page for documented width options for that mold. Then ask the seller to confirm which width the specific board is.

For sellers

Including a caliper or ruler photo with every deck listing eliminates the most common buyer question and speeds up transactions.

How widths have trended over time

Retailer and community guides broadly agree that fingerboard widths have trended wider over time. Early boards were narrow — Tech Deck started around 26mm and many early-2000s makers built similarly narrow decks — and 32mm later became the long-standing standard, prized as a balance of control and accessibility. In recent years the community has increasingly moved to 34mm as a modern default, with 33.3–33.6mm treated as a 'sweet spot' in between. These are documented general trends across multiple retailer and community sources, not a precisely dated catalog timeline, and individual rider preference still drives actual width choice — some riders deliberately ride narrower or wider than the current norm.7, 1, 16, 8, 2

  • 01Early era: narrow boards (Tech Deck began around 26mm; many early-2000s decks were similarly narrow)
  • 0232mm: became the long-standing standard, widely described as a control and accessibility balance
  • 0334mm: increasingly the modern default in current pro setups
  • 0433.3–33.6mm: commonly described as the 'sweet spot' between 32mm and 34mm
  • 05This narrow-to-wide shift is documented across retailer and community guides, but no primary source fixes exact dates — treat it as a general trend, not a precise timeline

For buyers

Width preference is personal. The narrow-to-wide trend can help orient a search, but the best width for a given buyer depends on feel, not era.

For sellers

Do not price a deck primarily based on era associations without supporting evidence. List width, condition, and mold as the primary specs.

How to think about width when shopping used listings

When browsing used deck listings on a marketplace, width is the first spec to confirm because it determines truck compatibility and is the hardest dimension to verify without a measurement. Condition, concave, mold, and graphic all matter for deck value, but a deck that cannot be matched with available trucks at the buyer's preferred width is not useful regardless of its other attributes. Buyers who are flexible on width have a broader pool of available listings; buyers who need a specific width should filter or ask early in the conversation.10, 3, 1, 8

  • 01Confirm width before evaluating condition — a great-condition deck in the wrong width is not useful
  • 0232mm and 34mm are the widths with the most readily available compatible trucks across brands
  • 0329mm and 36mm have compatible trucks documented by Blackriver and others but may be harder to find in used listings
  • 04Side-by-side photos with a known-width deck or a ruler are more reliable than visual width estimates

For buyers

If you are building a setup from used parts, decide on your width first, then search for deck and trucks at that width separately. Buying mismatched widths from separate listings requires a second purchase to correct.

For sellers

Include deck width in the listing title so buyers searching by width can find the listing. Format: brand + mold/shape + width + condition (e.g., 'Berlinwood popsicle 32mm used').

On the Kingpin marketplace

Deck width is the most consequential unlisted spec on used deck and complete listings on Kingpin. A buyer who cannot confirm width cannot confirm truck compatibility, which means they cannot safely build or complete a setup from a used listing without messaging the seller first. Adding a structured 'deck width (mm)' field to deck and complete listing forms — and surfacing that field in search filters — would let buyers find compatible setups without extra back-and-forth. This guide article can be referenced in listing-helper copy, seller onboarding guidance, and future search filter UI that lets buyers filter by width range (e.g., 29mm, 32mm, 34mm, 36mm+).

References

Numbered references to the brand, retailer, and community pages that back this article. The label notes how firmly each source is established.

  1. 1.Which Fingerboard Deck Width & Shape Should I Ride?— Teak TuningOfficial↩

    Teak Tuning guide comparing 29mm, 32mm, and 34mm as documented width options with community-facing recommendations.

  2. 2.Fingerboard Sizes. What Do They Mean?— Broken Knuckle FingerboardsRetailer↩

    Covers what fingerboard size measurements refer to and how to read width specs.

  3. 3.Berlinwood Pro Fingerboards— BlackriverOfficial↩

    Berlinwood catalog on Blackriver Shop documenting 29mm, 32mm, 33.3mm, 36mm widths; low/medium concave; popsicle shape; 5-ply.

  4. 4.Wooden 5 Ply Fingerboard Popsicle Shape Deck 29mm x 96mm - The Classic— Teak TuningOfficial↩

    Teak Tuning product page confirming 29mm as a documented catalog width in popsicle shape.

  5. 5.Popsicle 29mm Blank Deck— DK FingerboardsOfficial↩

    DK Fingerboards product page confirming 29mm popsicle blank deck as a documented catalog item.

  6. 6.FlatFace Fingerboard Decks (G15 / G16)— FlatFace FingerboardsOfficial↩

    FlatFace official deck collection; documents the G16 at 33.6mm (works with 32mm or 34mm trucks) and the G15 in widths including 29mm.

  7. 7.What Size Fingerboard Should I Get? 29, 32 or 34mm?— Concrete Wave MagazineCommunity↩

    Community-facing article comparing 29mm, 32mm, and 34mm as three documented size categories with community preference notes.

  8. 8.Fingerboard Sizes Explained: 32mm vs 34mm vs 36mm— Caramel FingerboardsRetailer↩

    Retailer comparison of 32mm, 34mm, and 36mm width categories with community-facing descriptions.

  9. 9.Five Luck Fingerboard Decks (33.3mm / 33.5mm)— Five LuckRetailer↩

    Five Luck deck listings (via the FlatFace storefront and other retailers) documenting mid-size widths including 33.3mm and 33.5mm.

  10. 10.Blackriver Pro Fingerboard Trucks— BlackriverOfficial↩

    Documents Blackriver truck widths at 29mm, 32mm, 34mm, 36mm; confirms width as primary sizing dimension.

  11. 11.Caramel Fingerboard Decks (38mm / 40mm)— Caramel FingerboardsRetailer↩

    Caramel deck catalog documenting wider decks above 36mm, including 38mm and 40mm named molds.

  12. 12.Goo LTD Products— Goo LTDOfficial↩

    Shows mold families including High or Die, Midlife Crisis, and Wide Life Crisis; the Wide Life Crisis name denotes a wider profile, but Goo does not publish an exact width on its product pages.

  13. 13.Which Fingerboard Deck Shape Is Right For Me?— Teak TuningOfficial↩

    Covers shape (popsicle and others), concave, and how shape interacts with width in choosing a setup.

  14. 14.Choosing Your First Fingerboard Deck: Complete Guide— Saigon SkateboardsRetailer↩

    Covers deck shape, concave types, width, and how these dimensions interact in choosing a deck.

  15. 15.How to Choose Fingerboard Trucks in 2025— Caramel FingerboardsRetailer↩

    Covers truck width matching to deck width and the concept of axle overhang vs. flush-width setups.

  16. 16.What's the Difference Between 32mm and 34mm?— Teak TuningOfficial↩

    Teak Tuning direct comparison of 32mm and 34mm as the two most commonly referenced width categories.

  17. 17.How to Choose the Right Deck Width: 32mm vs 34mm vs 36mm Explained— Teak TuningOfficial

    Teak Tuning three-way comparison covering 32mm, 34mm, and 36mm with beginner and experienced rider framing.

Was this article helpful?

About this article

This article is educational and reflects general, sourced community and retailer knowledge about fingerboard gear. It is not a grading, valuation, rarity, or authenticity service, and Kingpin does not guarantee the value, rarity, or authenticity of any item based on this content. Always review the actual listing photos, specs, and seller details before buying.

If something in a listing looks off, report it and choose the category that fits.

Buy on Kingpin Market

A wooden fingerboard deck shown on a plain surface.
Photo: Matěj Baťha / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)
Search gear related to this storyKingpin Market

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A professional fingerboard complete setup with a wooden deck, metal trucks, and wheels.
Photo: Fabian Schreiter / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)
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On this page

  • How fingerboard deck width works
  • 29mm: narrow
  • 32mm: a widely documented standard
  • 33mm / 33.3mm / 33.6mm: mid-size
  • 34mm: a commonly used current width
  • 36mm and wider: wide setups
  • How shape interacts with width
  • Truck compatibility and axle overhang
  • Identifying deck width when specs are missing from a listing
  • How widths have trended over time
  • How to think about width when shopping used listings

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Beginner Completes: What Makes a Good First Fingerboard Setup

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