SCARPA RIBELLE RUN GTX

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Overall

#462 in

Trail Running Shoes

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Sentiment score33% positive
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Last updated: May 10, 2026

Reddit Reviews

Reddit IconCommercial-Ask-1288
6 months ago

Grabbed a Scarpa Ribelle GTX Trail running shoe for a bargain and it rocks!

Reddit Iconazuresubmarine
10 months ago

Gravel is a tricky surface, I agree. It probably depends on the the percentage of a certain terrain in a run that I choose the shoes. Generally, for steep grass I like Mudtalons with 8mm lugs, for snow the Genesis and for barely runnable rocks Bushidos. But then again, there is always a trade-off, since a run is usually composed of different surfaces. As an allrounder in alpine environment, I often go for Dynafit, Prodigio or Ribelle Run. YMMY. (And yes: I might have too many shoes).

Reddit IconBoysenberryGeneral84
2 months ago

I too have gained appreciation for the Scarpa Ribbelle Run. Have tried most all the other usual contenders too, Ribelle Run is current fav.

Reddit IconEndivi
2 months ago

I used Scarpa Ribelle Runs for easy scrambles (UIAA grade 3 iirc), any shoe designed for sky running will work decently well

Reddit IconFluid-Time-853
9 months ago

I have been running in the Italian Alps for about ten years with distances even over 100km. I think that's enough to give you some advice. It really depends on where you live, the terrain you train on (mud, gravel, rocks, roots), the distance you like. To start, however, I recommend a comfortable shoe with a 4-6mm drop that is not excessively cushioned (you lose a lot of sensitivity on the ground) a sole with not too large notches (if there are some fast areas) Hoka Mafate Speed, New Balance Hierro, La Sportiva Akasha, Nnormal kjerag. Salomon sense ride (cheap and fast) Now I'm using the Scarpa Ribelle Run, they have 500km but they're not good

Reddit IconKaedamanoods
9 months ago

Per title, was wondering everybody’s opinions on this? For context I have ample bouldering/sport/trad climbing experience and am getting more into scrambling. I’ve done needle peak, sky pilot, west lion, Brunswick & crown, for reference. I’ve done pretty much all of these in scarpa ribelle runs which I find: - very nicely lightweight & breathable - excellent grip on trail - very grippy rubber for smearing - edging leaves something to be desired - rather soft and insecure for this - fitwise, a touch narrow and pinches my pinky toes uncomfortably - would like smth that fits wider - not always the greatest protection against ~baseball sized talus As I look into other & bigger objectives (ie markhor-needle, tricouni, armchair, would like to get my fitness up to eventually do Robie Reid in a day), I start wondering if there’s something that could work for me better. I was looking at the scarpa cruxes which seems like it’d be a lot more secure on the technical sections, but im not sure how comfortable they’d be on a massive day like a single day push of Robie Reid. On the other hand I’d rather be able to climb well vs have a foot pop and die lol. Or, should I just lean into trail comfort and then when it comes time to do consequential stuff, switch into rock shoes if the trail runners don’t cut it? What’s everybody’s thoughts?

Reddit IconTheNewNorth
7 months ago

Scarpa shoes are excellent if they fit your feet. I haver both the Ribelle Run (somewhat narrow and firm - more precision oriented) and the Ribelle Run Kaligra G (wider and a bit softer) which I really enjoy running/hiking in.

Reddit IconAlready-asleep
8 months ago

I also have narrow feet and was day hiking quite happily in a pair of scarpa trail runners. Alas I found that with multi day trips my feet were swelling enough, even by day 2, that my toes no longer felt comfortable and I was getting a ton of pressure on my heels. I switched to a pair of Salomon Elixir shoes in the same size and the roominess of the toe box has made a big difference to me. I can’t say there have been any downsides, but as a person with narrower feet I have to make sure I lace with a heel lock.

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