Snow is brutal on a camera sensor — reflective, high-contrast, and capable of blowing out highlights in seconds on a sunny day. ND filters fix that. They’re not just for videographers who care about motion blur; they’re for anyone who wants footage that doesn’t look washed out and overexposed on a bluebird day.

Why You Need NDs on Snow
At 4K60, you should be shooting at 1/120 shutter speed to follow the 180-degree shutter rule. On a bright snow day, that forces your camera to crank ISO and still get overexposed. An ND filter cuts incoming light so your shutter speed is correct and your footage has natural motion blur instead of that choppy, over-sharp look that screams “action cam.”
The Four Densities Explained
ND8 works on overcast days and in trees. ND16 is the sweet spot for most ski days with partial clouds. ND32 handles bright sun on open groomers. ND64 is for full white-out sun at altitude where the snow is reflecting everything back at the lens. Most kits include ND8/16/32/64 — that covers 95% of snow conditions you’ll actually shoot in.
Polar Pro vs Freewell vs Tiffen
Polar Pro makes the best glass — truest color, no color cast, fits perfectly. They’re also the most expensive at around $70–80 per filter pack. Freewell is the value king at $40–50 for a full 4-pack; color is slightly warmer but it’s barely noticeable without a direct comparison. Tiffen makes solid glass but their GoPro GoPro mounting guide for every ski angle options are limited — mostly designed for legacy models.

Our Pick for Each Budget
Under $50: Freewell Magnetic Quick-Swap 4-Pack. It’s fast to swap with gloves, covers all conditions, and lasts a full season with normal use. Over $60: Polar Pro Hero 13 Filter Pack — buy it once, don’t think about it again. Skip any no-name ND filters under $20; they add color casts and vignetting that are a nightmare to fix in edit.

One ND filter is not enough. Grab a pack, learn your conditions, and stop throwing away good footage to overexposure.
These filter rules carry over to other platforms too — if you’re running or considering an Insta360 Ace Pro 2, Freewell makes compatible ND packs for it as well, and the same ND8/16/32/64 density logic applies on snow.



