Decks across a dozen brands are sitting at 25% off right now
A wide sweep of deck deals at 25% off makes this a good week to restock. Here are the five most interesting picks in the current crop.

Every deal in today's list is a deck, and every single one is sitting at exactly 25% off its original price. That kind of uniform discount usually means a retailer is clearing inventory across a broad selection rather than spotlighting one product, which works in your favor if you were already planning a board rebuild. The price range runs from about $57 to $66, so the spread is tight. What separates the interesting picks from the noise is width, brand pedigree, and who the pro model is attached to.
Deck: Santa Cruz Winkowski Vertigo 9.5in — 25% off
The Santa Cruz Winkowski Vertigo Medium 9.5in drops from $86.95 to $64.95, which is a meaningful cut on a shaped deck from one of the oldest names in the industry. The 9.5-inch width and the 30.05-inch length tell you this is not a standard popsicle. Santa Cruz's shaped decks tend toward wider tails, directional noses, and concave profiles that borrow from the transition-era playbook, so this one is aimed at skaters who want a functional shape for pools, ramps, or the kind of mellow street spots where a bigger board actually helps.
Daniel Winkowski has been riding for Santa Cruz for years and his graphics trend toward dense, detailed illustration work. The Vertigo name fits that aesthetic. If you have been sitting on the fence about trying a shaped board and you skate a lot of concrete parks or bowls, $64.95 is a reasonable entry point compared to the usual $87 ask.
Deck: DGK Bruce Lee Dragon Lee Lenticular 8.25 — 25% off
The DGK Bruce Lee Dragon Lee Lenticular 8.25 comes down from $87.93 to $65.95. The lenticular graphic treatment is the headline here, meaning the art shifts or animates depending on the viewing angle, which is a production detail that adds manufacturing cost and usually keeps the retail price elevated. At 8.25 inches this is a standard street width that suits most trick skating without being specialized in any direction.
DGK has been doing Bruce Lee collaborations for a while and they tend to move quickly because the crossover appeal is real. The lenticular finish means the graphic is going to look noticeably different from a standard screen print, both in hand and in photos. If you care about what your setup looks like sitting against the wall, this one stands out. If you just need a workhorse deck, there are cheaper options in today's list, but none of them have this level of graphic production.
Deck: Heroin 100th Egg 9.125 — 25% off
The Heroin 100th Egg 9.125 is the widest board in today's list at 9.125 inches, down from $81.27 to $60.95. Heroin is a UK-based brand with a strong cult following, known for egg-shaped decks that have a compressed nose-to-tail ratio and a wider midsection than a standard popsicle. The egg shape gives you more foot platform in the center of the board, which changes how you balance on it and how it responds to ollies and landings.
This is a niche product and the price reflects that it is not moving the same volume as a Real or Chocolate deck. At $60.95 it is cheaper than most of the pro models in today's list despite the specialty shape, which makes it an interesting pick for anyone who has been curious about egg geometry but has not wanted to pay a premium to try it. The 100th designation likely marks a milestone run, though the data does not specify further.
Deck: Real Mason Volcano 8.38 — 25% off
The Real Mason Volcano 8.38 goes from $84.95 to $63.95. Real has been pressing some of the most consistent decks in the industry for decades, and Mason Silva is one of the better street skaters working right now. The 8.38-inch width is a thoughtful middle ground: wider than the traditional street standard but not so wide that flip tricks get sluggish. It is the kind of size that works if you predominantly skate street but want a little more board underfoot for ledge or gap skating.
Real's pressing quality is worth mentioning specifically because it affects how long the board stays rideable, not just how it looks on day one. A 25% discount on a Real pro model gets you to $63.95, which is competitive with the house-brand and teamski decks in this same sale. If you are choosing between a blank or generic team model and a named pro deck, this is the kind of price gap where the decision gets easy.
Deck: Blood Wizard Rennie Pyre 8.75 — 25% off
The Blood Wizard Rennie Pyre 8.75 drops from $77.27 to $57.95, making it the lowest-priced pick in this recap despite being one of the wider boards on offer. Blood Wizard is a Sacramento-based brand with a heavy art and DIY ethos, and their decks often have elaborate hand-drawn graphics that look closer to screen-printed posters than typical skate graphics. The 8.75-inch width puts this firmly in the pool and transition category for most skaters, though plenty of people run boards this size for all-terrain cruising.
At this width you are trading some flip-trick snappiness for foot stability on larger surfaces, which is the right call if you spend time at concrete parks with big bowls or want a setup that handles comfortable at speed. $57.95 is the floor in today's list, and for a brand with Blood Wizard's reputation among the underground-leaning end of the skate world, that is a genuinely low price. If you have been running a 9.0 or above and want a pro model at under $60, this is the one to look at.