The Perfect Skateboarding Setup for Beginners in 2026 — No-BS Buying Guide
First ollie botched on a 40-euro board that delaminates within a week. We’ve all been there. The problem isn’t skateboarding — it’s the crap gear you were sold. This guide is what a friend who’s been skating for 15 years would tell you at the skatepark: piece by piece, no BS, to build a real setup between 185 and 241 euros.
⏱ Reading time: 5 min

The Deck — The Heart of Your Setup
First reflex: forget those 40-euro complete skateboards from Decathlon. A skateboard deck is 7 plies of pressed Canadian maple, with a precise concave and nose/tail. Below that standard, you get soft wood, zero pop, and a deck that delaminates after two weeks.
In 2026, the trend is for boards between 8.0″ and 8.25″ wide. More stable than a 7.75″, more agile than an 8.5″. It’s the sweet spot for learning. If you have big feet (43+), go up to 8.25″ without hesitation.
Our recommendation: the Powell Peralta Flight Deck. Yes, it costs more than a classic deck. But its fiberglass + maple + epoxy resin construction makes it almost indestructible. Pro testers report a lifespan 2 to 3 times longer than a standard 7-ply. For a beginner who’s going to bash their tail on the pavement with every ollie attempt, it’s a worthwhile investment.

Quality
Value for Money
Durability
Powell Peralta Flight Deck 8.0″
Fiberglass + maple construction. Almost unbreakable. The deck that will survive your learning phase and beyond.
Between 100 and 130 euros
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Budget Alternative: a Baker or Anti Hero 8.0″ deck, around 55-65 €. Classic, reliable 7-ply Canadian maple, with a forgiving medium concave. Less durable than the Flight, but excellent value for money to test the waters without overcommitting.

Quality
Value for Money
Durability
Baker Brand Logo Deck 8.0″
The street classic. Medium concave, 7-ply maple construction. Millions of tricks have been landed on Baker.
Between 50 and 70 euros
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The deck is settled. Now for the part 80% of beginners mess up trying to save 20 euros.
Trucks — Your Steering, Your Grind
Trucks are what connect your feet to the road. And this is THE part where you absolutely must not skimp. Cheap trucks = broken kingpins, foam bushings, and terrible turning.
Golden rule: truck width must match deck width. For an 8.0″ deck, you get 139mm trucks. For an 8.25″, 144mm. Period.
The industry standard for decades: Independent Stage 11. Smooth turning, smooth grinding, durable aluminum construction. Thunder and Venture are also excellent options, but Indys remain the benchmark when you’re starting — they’re very forgiving.

Quality
Value for Money
Durability
Independent Stage 11 Standard 139mm (pair)
The most ridden truck in skateboarding history. No hesitation for a first setup.
Between 45 and 60 euros
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Trucks checked. Now, for the part nobody really understands at first — and which makes all the difference on the street.
Wheels — Speed vs. Control
Two parameters to understand: diameter (in mm) and hardness (in A). For a versatile beginner who will ride street and a bit of park:
Diameter: 52-54mm. Small enough for tricks, large enough not to get stuck on every pebble. The sweet spot for all-terrain.
Hardness: 99A. The street/park standard. Below 95A, too soft for the skatepark. Above 101A, ultra slippery — avoid when you’re starting out.
The Spitfire Formula Four are the absolute benchmark in 2026. Flat spot resistant, excellent lifespan, consistent grip. Available in all imaginable sizes and hardnesses.

Quality
Value for Money
Durability
Spitfire Formula Four Classic 52mm 99A
Urethane made in USA. No flat spots, consistent grip. The wheels 90% of pros use.
Between 30 and 45 euros
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Wheels done. And now we get to the biggest marketing lie in the skateboarding world.
Bearings — The Classic Beginner’s Mistake
Let’s be direct: the ABEC system is marketing hype. ABEC-7, ABEC-9… it means nothing for skateboarding. This rating measures industrial tolerance, not performance on a board.
What matters: material quality, protective shields, and lubrication. Bones Reds are THE benchmark bearings for beginners for over 20 years. Inexpensive, high-performance, easy to clean. If you want to upgrade later, Bones Swiss exist — but at 60 €+ a set, save that for when you can kickflip.

Quality
Value for Money
Durability
Bones Reds Skateboard Bearings (set of 8)
Unbeatable value for money since 2001. Easy cleaning, consistent speed.
Between 20 and 30 euros
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Want to know exactly how much to spend? The next section gives the exact total for both configurations — premium and budget.
Total Budget Recap
Here’s what it looks like, the premium beginner setup version:
Budget Breakdown
| Part | Product | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Deck | Powell Peralta Flight 8.0″ | 100–130 € |
| Trucks | Independent Stage 11 139mm | 45–60 € |
| Wheels | Spitfire Formula Four 52mm | 30–45 € |
| Bearings | Bones Reds | 20–30 € |
| Grip tape | Mob ou Jessup | 6–10 € |
| Hardware | Independent Phillips 7/8″ | 4–7 € |
| TOTAL | 205–282 € | |
Budget version (Baker deck instead of Flight): ~185 €. That’s fair for gear that will last and won’t hinder your progress.
A piece of advice: don’t buy everything online if you can avoid it. A local skateshop will assemble your board for free, advise you on sizing, and you’ll support skateboarding in your city. If you don’t have a local shop, the Amazon links above will do — but think local first.
And if you want to know where to ride your new setup in Marseille, we’ve got the guide. And for those who want to see what high-level skateboarding looks like in 2026, check out Ginwoo Onodera’s historic record at SLS Sydney — that’s motivating.
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