0:00 Intro 1:15 10th Alta / Snowbird, UT 3:31 9th Whistler Blackcomb, Canada 4:55 8th Arapahoe Basin 6:28 7th Banff Sunshine / Lake Louise , Canada 8:23 6th Brighton, UT 9:33 5th Sierra at Tahoe, CA 10:55 4th Jay Peak, VT 12:22 3rd Mt. Baker, WA 1,500 ft vertical 14:04 2nd Wolf Creek, southern CO 15:21 1st Whitefish, northern MT 17:25 Hon. Mentions: Schweitzer NW ID, Loveland CO, Tremblant Q, Kirkwood CA, Big White BC, Kicking Horse BC, Revelstoke BC, Powder Mt. UT, Grand Targhee ID/WY, Snowbasin UT
Seeing those prices makes me so glad I'm living in Japan, I can get a bullet train ticket + lift for just 76USD to the nearest resort and the snow quality is good plus the town is great.
As always, great content. It's absolutely amazing how ticket window prices have risen. Even back in the early 2000s, I skied Homewood for $25 during the week, Heavenly for $75 on a weekend and $67 at Kirkwood. Of course back then, there wasn't an Ikon, Indy or Epic pass.
You know the world is ending when nearly $150 is considered a good value 💀 And I know that it's a better value than other places, but c'mon: 10 years ago I thought $99 was an outrage and now there are resorts pushing $250.
Clearly the trade off is convenience. Although I’d say Lake Louise in February with the shuttle makes it the best value to me. Love Banff. Great mountain.
American resorts have become so ridiculously expensive (lifts + room) that it is now cheaper to fly to Europe to ski (even when you include the airfare).
Yeah I ski for the snow. I hunt pow. Europe snow quality sucks generally and run variability is low. No decent tree runs - no aspen glades. No great spruce/fir bowls. Much of the terrain is often closed. Much of the skiable terrain has the feel of huge wide cat walks that are green cruisers. No thanks. I’ll keep getting Epic or Ikon annual passes and get my daily lift ticket price well under $50. Take that Europe. Additionally more and more European resorts are on their last legs with global warming. I’ll take 600” of pow in Snowbird/Alta and 400” of good stuff at Vail, Snowmass, Steamboat, Winterpark… every day of the week. (Of course 2022/23 was an unusually great season in the US 😂)
@@F3lix953 A few valid points. I’m no longer interested in skiing couloirs but I was when younger. Crowds. Not a factor with me. I have the flexibility to ski when I want so I always avoid holiday crowds. For instance I finished my ski season by spending 2 weeks at Vail. Last week of March. First week of April. Very nice conditions. It snowed a total of 33” in January type weather. Unusually cold for that time of year. I was literally in a lift line once - 15 minutes at Gondola 1 for first run at 8:30am after 8” fell during the night. That morning I got first runs on 5 slopes front side and spent the rest of the day in the back bowls hitting fresh pow all day. It did get tracked up but it was easy to find virgin snow for 2 days between other tracks. My longest line for the other 13 days was under 2 minutes. Most of the time literally no wait. I was never in a long lift line the entire 22/23 season. Powder. Have you ever skied Alta/Snowbird champagne powder? Up to your waist? Up to your nipples? I have. Numerous times. It’s nothing like European snow I’ve ever seen. It’s ethereal. Magical. In my world the only experience that may compete is being a pro surfer, in a drop dead gorgeous tropical location, riding the most beautiful break, catching tubes that may only occur once every year or so. Personally my most memorable runs, and the runs I seek out, are glade skiing bottomless pow. Silently snaking between the trees with a couple friends. Wide open above tree line bowl skiing is great in fresh pow but for me nothing beats laying down tracks in the spruce and fir glades. You can get nice to great pow skiing almost weekly in Utah’s Alta/Snowbird region. Those conditions have haunted my dreams, whispered to me, since I was 8 years old. Not Europe. And when I’m dying and life is draining from me my last thought will probably be - if only I could have one more pow run in the glades.
@@mrsmartypants_1cope harder 😂 talking about amount of snow tho you don’t even have one skiing area that is open the whole year. You guys always always find a way to cope to not give in that Europe is superior in terms of skiing. Greetings from the Glacier in End of may with fine powder 😮💨
You are 100% correct about Whitefish, MT. I've skied their multiple times, and I am still shocked how reasonably priced the tickets are year round for how HUGE the ski resort is.
Jay is pretty good so far this season. Probably one of the better snow packs as of right now. Though this weather this weekend really ate it to the snow pack.
Willamette Pass blows all these resorts out of the f'ing water in terms of ratio of ticket price to experience. It's 1550 vertical feet (same vert. rise as Baker), about half the area of Baker, but midweek tickets are $20. TWENTY DOLLARS. If you book your trip a couple weeks in advance the weekend tickets are ALSO TWENTY DOLLARS. If you book day-of on a really busy weekend it gets up to a max of about $65. It's legitimately cheaper than some tiny 100 foot vert hills in Wisconsin and it has a high-speed six pack and really good tree skiing, I don't see how you beat that on value.
Before COVID Mt Norquay in Banff offered select days, usually once a month, where tickets were $2. Lines were insane obviously but was a great way to get on the mountain for cheap
Solid list and summaries. I was surprised Crystal didn't make the cut -- I've skied there for like $70 on a Tuesday last March. Great conditions, amazing mountain, I almost couldn't believe the value. Would recommend.
Brighton also has night skiing available, while with a smaller footprint, at even lower prices too, and night skiing is convenient because it is less busy and (for locals at least) it’s nice to go up for night cruising after a busy day at work
one of my Fav resorts in colorado is Ski Copper, 60 dollar all day lift tickets, with thursdays being 30 dollars. Its a really cool resort, no lodging but its near Leadville Colorado
While it's not very big, if you're skiing for the very first time, Granby Ranch is probably the best value and best place to learn. I'm not sure if they still have the deal, but at one point, 3 days of private lessons if you've never skiied before gets you a season pass. They genuinely give one away. It's perfect for families too, since there's only one base area, so you won't be getting lost
Baker! Mt Baker! Near Bellingham, WA. Schweitzer, near Sandpoint, ID. Whitewater, BC. True western Canada hits different on price and number of people, plus good snow and insane terrain
With the lift tickets and accommodation prices in Colorado, Utah and California, it is actually cheaper to fly to Japan and enjoy the true powder paradise You only need 3-4 days of lift tickets differential to pay for the trans-Pacific economy flight over domestic flight to the Rockies
For a period of about 6 years our family of 3 would take an annual trip to SB or Telluride. Sad to say, we’ve pretty much been priced out of those type options. Yeah, we could do it cheaper, but a big part of the fun is staying in decent accommodations, and having nice towns during downtime.
Thanks for the Baker shout-out, also you should change the review for Mt.Baker on your website to say record braking snowfall (it's true, at 1140in during the 1998-1999 season)
Two other great values in the PNW area are skibowl and white pass, $59 and $75 respectively. Skibowl has some inconsistent snow quality and primitive lifts, but has probably the most diverse advanced terrain on Mt. Hood, and it's never crowded enough for the slow lifts to become a huge problem. I've been able to ski right onto the lift on bluebird days, if you stay on the upper, advanced region. White pass has much better snow, and also a bunch of great advanced and in-bounds off trail area. It's got a pretty big footprint and more updated lifts, and it's never crowded either. It's kinda in the middle of nowhere tho.
I’m taking a trip to visit a buddy in Washington this week and snowboard while there and I was amazed at how cheap places like baker and white pass are especially compared to the resorts i frequent in New England. It’s crazy that my 3 days riding in the PNW is almost the same price of a single day at my local mountains in NE
I totally agree with White Pass. I haven’t been to Skibowl. Being 2 hours away, day trips are long and tiring but well with it. Crystal is getting expensive and Snoqualmie has short runs.
When I skiied at Alta in 2004 the daily lift price was $42. Put that in an inflation calculator and that is $67 in today's dollars. That the cheapest ticket you can get is double its cost in real terms from two decades ago is unconscionable.
A-basin will probably be on this list with their three day midweek pass. Also probably a few Canadian areas like Banff Sunshine and Big White. The best deal for day tickets in the east would probably be Jay Peak, but the way to go would be the Indy Pass.
That is still very expensive. Here in Austria I pay around 700 USD for the whole year for 33 ski ressorts. The farthest area I reach within 1h 30 min of driving, so on average it's just 30-40 min of driving. The season for the highest area (glacier ressort) is 8 months (October to May/June).
For the North East/New England, Saddleback Mountain in Rangeley Maine far and away has the best life ticket value. Average price of ~$60. Some of the best expert and off-piste skiing in New England. Comparable snowfall totals to Jay. No lift lines, ever. It’s amazing there.
Lift ticket at Baker is $87.04 Mount Baker broke the World Record single season snow depth record in 1998-99 at 1140” or 95’., that was a crazy year allowing us to ride areas never dreamed of before. Baker also broke the most snow fall in one month of 304”. Baker is also home of the World famous Mt Baker Banked Slalom which is going on this weekend after a two year cancellation due to covid. It has also been ranked in the top 5 for best powder in Powder and Ski magazine. But don’t go there it’s super super super busy
You should do a ranking video on the Whitefish Mountain resort in Montana! It’s my favorite resort to go to and could compete with some of the top ranks imo ❤❤
A question - I was just looking at lift ticket price in the French Alps and the lift tickets are just incredibly cheap. Les 3 Valles, the biggest resort in the world, is just 60 Euros/day; and Chamonix, just 50. Any idea why Europe is so much cheaper than North America? Surely it's not terrain or snow quality!
Regarding snow quality and quantity, western North America generally beats the Alps overall (of course there are exceptions, but this is generally the case). Japan beats both of them in terms of quantity but not quality (the snow isn't very dry here). Terrain-wise, it depends on what visitors are looking for. Western North America has a mix of tree skiing and bowls, whereas the Alps tend more towards bowls and open alpine terrain. Otherwise, the differences are mostly in terms of business models and demand. North American resorts have been shifting towards the multi-resort ski pass systems (Epic, Ikon, Mountain Collective, Indy) and package deals for people planning vacations in advance. In Europe with its higher population density, the ski areas are generally more geographically accessible for single day and overnight trips as well as having more ski area competition per capita, so the business models of the resorts there are oriented towards more casual visitors who don't plan in advance and stay for a short time. This is only part of a larger picture, but it covers some of the major differences.
@@adamstofsky4244 At least in Austria the goverement is pumping money into the resorts to keep them expanding, always have top notch lifts and keep the prices low... skiing is considered a part of the National identity! So everyone should be able to acces it. If u live in Innsbruck for example u can buy the FREIZEITTICKET for 450€ and get unlimited days at almost 30 resorts in the area.... Liftprices in General are cheaper for locals
for the east you definitely missed smugglers notch, best family ski area round here and some of the absolute best overall terrain in the east for only 85 is blasphemous, especially when stowe right next to it almost doubles that price for basics the same thing with bigger crowds on the other side of the same mountain
Still as expensive as the most expensive ski areas in Austria, Germany, Italy etc. and not comparable to anywhere outside the Us you guys get scammed over shitty ski resorts with poor performance for their money that have nothing to deliver then snow. But that is what happens when the corps can own the whole mountain ain’t it?.
Very interesting. I am surprised you chose Jay peak and not Tremblant to represent the east :) Would love if you did this but compared ticket + accommodation pricing
I have 2 thoughts about value. First, certain regions are just cheaper than others. Idaho, Montana, and BC offer the same big time skiing that Utah and Colorado do, but at a much lower cost. I skied a 2000 vert, 2000 acre mountain on a powder day President's day last year for a $49 walk up ticket, and the longest line was 3 chairs. Second, you have to sacrifice something to get the lower ticket cost, what you choose to give up is where you need to make decisions. If you want some of the most difficult lines inbounds at any ski area, Bridger Bowl is half the price of Snowbird. The downsides are the more difficult flight in, no lodging on site, and the 20 minute hike. If you want cruisers for days, Panorama BC is a much better value than Sun Valley, but it's not exactly the same luxurious experience or name brand, and I'm honestly not sure how to get to Invermere if you can't just drive.
I agree with most of these, however whistler should be number one. They also are on the epic pass, and I’ve never seen their lift lines get longer than 20 minutes.
Sadly skiing is set up in such a way that you have to commit to a season pass or get an Epic or Ikon pass to be able to ski without hemorrhaging your money. I purchase my pass in June and then I don’t think about it. My home mountain Killington takes it out over three payments over six months. It also includes a Ikon pass. If you want cheap skiing like I did when I was raising my family we skied small feeder mountains. You know small areas with 1000 vertical or less and all fixed lifts. My pass at Killington allows me to push vouchers to friends for 50 percent off. I mostly brown bag it and eat on the lift except when I ski with my wife or kids, yeah they want no part of eating on the lift. Skiing has always been expensive but now it’s crazy town especially if you only ski a few days a year and have small children. Stay away from resorts and look for places that offer value, they are out there. In New England there are many places that are not over priced and there are plenty out west too. Loveland and A Basin are both great and I could spend days skiing both. Backcountry skiing is also a good option to break things up. Now that I am retired I have time for this. Enjoy the snow it’s wonderful.
We know! It's hard to efficiently book a trip without purchasing your lift access months in advance, but we're thankful for the remaining destination mountains that are at least relatively reasonable.
In Canada I would rank Fernie as a better value location than the other Canadian resorts. It has on resort lodging, better prices, great conditions and hot tub time machines :P It suffers the same drawback as Whitefish, not in a major city location or on a main highway.
Fernie is an excellent value on a good day, but you're also taking the risk of rain (which happens multiple times per season) and terrain closures (i.e. Polar Peak is closed for all but a handful of days each year).
@@PeakRankings Rain is a bigger concern at Whistler, rain days at Fernie are at the bottom while fresh snow falls up top. No different than most if not all Rockie mountain resorts. I even experienced a day like that and the snow conditions were way better than the snow in Lake Louis. When vacationing we can't pick the conditions, but Fernie on it's worst days has beat a lot of resorts on their best days.
As an european its hard to understand how any of those resorts are considered cheap, when the most expensive resorts in austria like Sölden, Ischgl or St. Anton are all under 70 $.
They force people to buy season passes like Ikon and Epic pass. Vail corporation bought up a ton of resorts and jacked up daily passes. It use to be pretty cheap until recently.
I think most of your followers are using ikon or epic passes. Daily pass prices matter very little. would be very interested to see a video on lodging cost with its relative value. For example, snow bird and Alta have some of the highest hotel room prices and very limited housing rental options.
Even with the ikon pass those mountains are super expensive if you stay at the base. Sandy UT is great but then you’re risking the road closures on powder days.
Red mountain lodge in Montana is only 89 for a full day and 64 for a half day. You just need to check conditions and see if the Palisades park area is open so you can get the full mountain
@@PeakRankings I was wondering about more specific settings. I run mine at the exact same res and framerate but can't get good quality footage. I think doing a whole video on your filming setup would be a great idea.
Kinda surprised Taos didn’t at least get an honorable mention. Phenomenal mountain and they have some very good advanced ticket prices. Otherwise, you definitely nailed all of my picks.
Average Taos lift ticket is now $161, so it was a bit expensive to make this list using the methodology we had. However, as you stated, the mountain is still a great deal if you book off-peak weekday tickets in advance (with rates as low as $95).
Since we already had Baker and Whitefish so far up the list (both of which undercut Schweitzer's ticket prices), we made the call to leave more space in the video to highlight mountains from other regions.
am I the only person who really dislikes that sound effect when the video moves to the next on the list? it always startles me, and it sounds jarring. Also, sounds like a basketball. if you're going to use a generic sound effect, use something skiing-related, like a swoosh of skis through snow or whatever. Or just a musical chord.
Whistler is really on cheap for Americans because of the exchange rate. And when you do the math, food, gas, canadian flights, taxes, etc, all make it extremely expensive for Canadians
0:00 Intro
1:15 10th Alta / Snowbird, UT
3:31 9th Whistler Blackcomb, Canada
4:55 8th Arapahoe Basin
6:28 7th Banff Sunshine / Lake Louise , Canada
8:23 6th Brighton, UT
9:33 5th Sierra at Tahoe, CA
10:55 4th Jay Peak, VT
12:22 3rd Mt. Baker, WA 1,500 ft vertical
14:04 2nd Wolf Creek, southern CO
15:21 1st Whitefish, northern MT
17:25 Hon. Mentions: Schweitzer NW ID, Loveland CO, Tremblant Q, Kirkwood CA, Big White BC, Kicking Horse BC, Revelstoke BC, Powder Mt. UT, Grand Targhee ID/WY, Snowbasin UT
no Brian Head UT?
When even Chamonix, considered to be an expensive ski resort in the Alps, is cheaper than the cheapest option here
Chamonix gets less than half the snow than every ski resort in this list. Even Jay Peak on the ice coast gets significantly more snow.
Very true. The reason why there are so few Europeans coming here. BC is way better/cheaper!
Seeing those prices makes me so glad I'm living in Japan, I can get a bullet train ticket + lift for just 76USD to the nearest resort and the snow quality is good plus the town is great.
As always, great content. It's absolutely amazing how ticket window prices have risen. Even back in the early 2000s, I skied Homewood for $25 during the week, Heavenly for $75 on a weekend and $67 at Kirkwood. Of course back then, there wasn't an Ikon, Indy or Epic pass.
You know the world is ending when nearly $150 is considered a good value 💀
And I know that it's a better value than other places, but c'mon: 10 years ago I thought $99 was an outrage and now there are resorts pushing $250.
Not for people earning $40,000 a year .
My local hill isn’t big but it’s $25 bucks and kids 12 and under ski free plus free lesson
What’s your local hill? That’s a great deal
@@Jay-vr9ir are you missing a zero?
@@MeanLaQueefa
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Clearly the trade off is convenience. Although I’d say Lake Louise in February with the shuttle makes it the best value to me. Love Banff. Great mountain.
American resorts have become so ridiculously expensive (lifts + room) that it is now cheaper to fly to Europe to ski (even when you include the airfare).
Yep.
Yeah I ski for the snow. I hunt pow. Europe snow quality sucks generally and run variability is low. No decent tree runs - no aspen glades. No great spruce/fir bowls. Much of the terrain is often closed. Much of the skiable terrain has the feel of huge wide cat walks that are green cruisers. No thanks. I’ll keep getting Epic or Ikon annual passes and get my daily lift ticket price well under $50. Take that Europe. Additionally more and more European resorts are on their last legs with global warming. I’ll take 600” of pow in Snowbird/Alta and 400” of good stuff at Vail, Snowmass, Steamboat, Winterpark… every day of the week. (Of course 2022/23 was an unusually great season in the US 😂)
@@F3lix953 A few valid points. I’m no longer interested in skiing couloirs but I was when younger. Crowds. Not a factor with me. I have the flexibility to ski when I want so I always avoid holiday crowds. For instance I finished my ski season by spending 2 weeks at Vail. Last week of March. First week of April. Very nice conditions. It snowed a total of 33” in January type weather. Unusually cold for that time of year. I was literally in a lift line once - 15 minutes at Gondola 1 for first run at 8:30am after 8” fell during the night. That morning I got first runs on 5 slopes front side and spent the rest of the day in the back bowls hitting fresh pow all day. It did get tracked up but it was easy to find virgin snow for 2 days between other tracks. My longest line for the other 13 days was under 2 minutes. Most of the time literally no wait. I was never in a long lift line the entire 22/23 season. Powder. Have you ever skied Alta/Snowbird champagne powder? Up to your waist? Up to your nipples? I have. Numerous times. It’s nothing like European snow I’ve ever seen. It’s ethereal. Magical. In my world the only experience that may compete is being a pro surfer, in a drop dead gorgeous tropical location, riding the most beautiful break, catching tubes that may only occur once every year or so. Personally my most memorable runs, and the runs I seek out, are glade skiing bottomless pow. Silently snaking between the trees with a couple friends. Wide open above tree line bowl skiing is great in fresh pow but for me nothing beats laying down tracks in the spruce and fir glades. You can get nice to great pow skiing almost weekly in Utah’s Alta/Snowbird region. Those conditions have haunted my dreams, whispered to me, since I was 8 years old. Not Europe. And when I’m dying and life is draining from me my last thought will probably be - if only I could have one more pow run in the glades.
@@mrsmartypants_1cope harder 😂 talking about amount of snow tho you don’t even have one skiing area that is open the whole year. You guys always always find a way to cope to not give in that Europe is superior in terms of skiing. Greetings from the Glacier in End of may with fine powder 😮💨
You are 100% correct about Whitefish, MT. I've skied their multiple times, and I am still shocked how reasonably priced the tickets are year round for how HUGE the ski resort is.
Fantastic review. That is why I love to watch your content. Jay Peak has been on my list for a while and I'll shoot for it in 2023.
Jay is pretty good so far this season. Probably one of the better snow packs as of right now. Though this weather this weekend really ate it to the snow pack.
Willamette Pass blows all these resorts out of the f'ing water in terms of ratio of ticket price to experience. It's 1550 vertical feet (same vert. rise as Baker), about half the area of Baker, but midweek tickets are $20. TWENTY DOLLARS. If you book your trip a couple weeks in advance the weekend tickets are ALSO TWENTY DOLLARS. If you book day-of on a really busy weekend it gets up to a max of about $65. It's legitimately cheaper than some tiny 100 foot vert hills in Wisconsin and it has a high-speed six pack and really good tree skiing, I don't see how you beat that on value.
Before COVID Mt Norquay in Banff offered select days, usually once a month, where tickets were $2. Lines were insane obviously but was a great way to get on the mountain for cheap
Went to A basin on mlk monday on a nice 3 inch pow day, the lines were at most 3 minutes long and had a lot of fun.
Solid list and summaries. I was surprised Crystal didn't make the cut -- I've skied there for like $70 on a Tuesday last March. Great conditions, amazing mountain, I almost couldn't believe the value. Would recommend.
Brighton also has night skiing available, while with a smaller footprint, at even lower prices too, and night skiing is convenient because it is less busy and (for locals at least) it’s nice to go up for night cruising after a busy day at work
Plus their parking lot fills up by 9am on weekends. Better ski Colorado. Way better skiing there. ;-)
Like the backflip at the end of the Whistler section
one of my Fav resorts in colorado is Ski Copper, 60 dollar all day lift tickets, with thursdays being 30 dollars. Its a really cool resort, no lodging but its near Leadville Colorado
I grew up skiing at Coooper!! Still wanna try out the chicago snow cats there.
While it's not very big, if you're skiing for the very first time, Granby Ranch is probably the best value and best place to learn. I'm not sure if they still have the deal, but at one point, 3 days of private lessons if you've never skiied before gets you a season pass. They genuinely give one away. It's perfect for families too, since there's only one base area, so you won't be getting lost
All these prices are stupid! The local resorts around here in Japan are about $US34 for a 1-day pass. I got a season pass for $US145!
Baker! Mt Baker! Near Bellingham, WA. Schweitzer, near Sandpoint, ID. Whitewater, BC. True western Canada hits different on price and number of people, plus good snow and insane terrain
How is Mt. Bachelor not on here. Second biggest resort in the us and ticket prices are less than $100 per day
With the lift tickets and accommodation prices in Colorado, Utah and California, it is actually cheaper to fly to Japan and enjoy the true powder paradise
You only need 3-4 days of lift tickets differential to pay for the trans-Pacific economy flight over domestic flight to the Rockies
For a period of about 6 years our family of 3 would take an annual trip to SB or Telluride. Sad to say, we’ve pretty much been priced out of those type options. Yeah, we could do it cheaper, but a big part of the fun is staying in decent accommodations, and having nice towns during downtime.
Thanks for the Baker shout-out, also you should change the review for Mt.Baker on your website to say record braking snowfall (it's true, at 1140in during the 1998-1999 season)
Great video!
You can ski WP in Oregon for $19 a day mid week ($9 a few weeks ago until they sold out of the cheaper tickets).
What’s wp?
@@kienwarren2870 Willamette Pass.
Two other great values in the PNW area are skibowl and white pass, $59 and $75 respectively. Skibowl has some inconsistent snow quality and primitive lifts, but has probably the most diverse advanced terrain on Mt. Hood, and it's never crowded enough for the slow lifts to become a huge problem. I've been able to ski right onto the lift on bluebird days, if you stay on the upper, advanced region. White pass has much better snow, and also a bunch of great advanced and in-bounds off trail area. It's got a pretty big footprint and more updated lifts, and it's never crowded either. It's kinda in the middle of nowhere tho.
You can ski Willamette Pass for $19 mid week right now if you buy a week or two ahead of time.
I LOVED white pass. Tline and skibowl are home for me
I’m taking a trip to visit a buddy in Washington this week and snowboard while there and I was amazed at how cheap places like baker and white pass are especially compared to the resorts i frequent in New England. It’s crazy that my 3 days riding in the PNW is almost the same price of a single day at my local mountains in NE
Shhhhhhh
I totally agree with White Pass. I haven’t been to Skibowl. Being 2 hours away, day trips are long and tiring but well with it. Crystal is getting expensive and Snoqualmie has short runs.
When I skiied at Alta in 2004 the daily lift price was $42. Put that in an inflation calculator and that is $67 in today's dollars. That the cheapest ticket you can get is double its cost in real terms from two decades ago is unconscionable.
Awesome! My home mountain (the best value in the PNW) is not listed here, thank you!
Lucky!
A-basin will probably be on this list with their three day midweek pass. Also probably a few Canadian areas like Banff Sunshine and Big White. The best deal for day tickets in the east would probably be Jay Peak, but the way to go would be the Indy Pass.
That is still very expensive.
Here in Austria I pay around 700 USD for the whole year for 33 ski ressorts. The farthest area I reach within 1h 30 min of driving, so on average it's just 30-40 min of driving. The season for the highest area (glacier ressort) is 8 months (October to May/June).
In the us you can get an epic local pass with several high quality resorts across the county for around 6 or 7 hundred I believe
you said "almost as good snow" for brighton. the snow at brighton is as good or better than little cottonwood. lake effect storms hit brighton first.
lift tickets are so expensive nowadays but the snow just feels so good :)
For the North East/New England, Saddleback Mountain in Rangeley Maine far and away has the best life ticket value. Average price of ~$60. Some of the best expert and off-piste skiing in New England. Comparable snowfall totals to Jay. No lift lines, ever. It’s amazing there.
Lift ticket at Baker is $87.04
Mount Baker broke the World Record single season snow depth record in 1998-99 at 1140” or 95’., that was a crazy year allowing us to ride areas never dreamed of before. Baker also broke the most snow fall in one month of 304”. Baker is also home of the World famous Mt Baker Banked Slalom which is going on this weekend after a two year cancellation due to covid. It has also been ranked in the top 5 for best powder in Powder and Ski magazine.
But don’t go there it’s super super super busy
The 35th LBS was fun, a foot of POW the day after. Love the steeps and drops, gotta pay attention terrain changes sneak up on you at Baker!
@@eugenearchibald7375 did you enter it ? I have a picture of me running the Banked Slalom in ‘87 - ‘88
No, stoked to watch, one of the Jones Boys put down a record. Cool to see all these legends shredding!
@@eugenearchibald7375 There’s still a couple guys competing in it that I competed against and one guy (Jason Loeb) was on our snowboard team
Awesome review. Thanks!
You should do a ranking video on the Whitefish Mountain resort in Montana! It’s my favorite resort to go to and could compete with some of the top ranks imo ❤❤
It's in the pipeline! Goal is to try to get some clearer footage before the end of the season.
@@PeakRankings Awesome, I'll be eagerly awaiting! Keep up the great content :)
Whitefish is cold, foggy, the new Chair 4 is known as "The Gambler" and the locals have bad breath and bad attitudes. Govern yourself accordingly.
suddenly the alps is cheap
Our family just spent 4 days in Whitefish and it is an amazing resort. First time doing a ski in ski out lodging and that was totally worth it.
A question - I was just looking at lift ticket price in the French Alps and the lift tickets are just incredibly cheap. Les 3 Valles, the biggest resort in the world, is just 60 Euros/day; and Chamonix, just 50. Any idea why Europe is so much cheaper than North America? Surely it's not terrain or snow quality!
Regarding snow quality and quantity, western North America generally beats the Alps overall (of course there are exceptions, but this is generally the case). Japan beats both of them in terms of quantity but not quality (the snow isn't very dry here). Terrain-wise, it depends on what visitors are looking for. Western North America has a mix of tree skiing and bowls, whereas the Alps tend more towards bowls and open alpine terrain.
Otherwise, the differences are mostly in terms of business models and demand. North American resorts have been shifting towards the multi-resort ski pass systems (Epic, Ikon, Mountain Collective, Indy) and package deals for people planning vacations in advance. In Europe with its higher population density, the ski areas are generally more geographically accessible for single day and overnight trips as well as having more ski area competition per capita, so the business models of the resorts there are oriented towards more casual visitors who don't plan in advance and stay for a short time. This is only part of a larger picture, but it covers some of the major differences.
@@actualstarfish3449 That's helpful - thanks!
@@adamstofsky4244 At least in Austria the goverement is pumping money into the resorts to keep them expanding, always have top notch lifts and keep the prices low... skiing is considered a part of the National identity! So everyone should be able to acces it. If u live in Innsbruck for example u can buy the FREIZEITTICKET for 450€ and get unlimited days at almost 30 resorts in the area.... Liftprices in General are cheaper for locals
European resorts often build infrastructure on the cheap with taxpayer money.
Mt Baker is the worst! Rains all the time. Go to Stevens Pass. Stay far away from The Mt. Baker Ski Area!
Dont blow up wolf creek!! :)
Whitefish. Gotta love it. Bier Stube never disappoints
It always rains at Baker
Come to Utah! Where everybody says "You!" when sending it down the hill.
Please don't. The canyons are full. Colorado is WAY better!
for the east you definitely missed smugglers notch, best family ski area round here and some of the absolute best overall terrain in the east for only 85 is blasphemous, especially when stowe right next to it almost doubles that price for basics the same thing with bigger crowds on the other side of the same mountain
Can’t wait for this one! My guess for the video is gonna be that you have to be smart to navigate a ski resort.
Loon Mountain in New Hampshire is $79 per day
Still as expensive as the most expensive ski areas in Austria, Germany, Italy etc. and not comparable to anywhere outside the Us you guys get scammed over shitty ski resorts with poor performance for their money that have nothing to deliver then snow. But that is what happens when the corps can own the whole mountain ain’t it?.
Love it. What mountain/video is next?
Steamboat is our next video review, and we also have some vs. content in the pipeline.
@@PeakRankings nice!!
Insane value! Only 250-300% more expensive than passes in euro resorts.
Very interesting. I am surprised you chose Jay peak and not Tremblant to represent the east :) Would love if you did this but compared ticket + accommodation pricing
I have 2 thoughts about value. First, certain regions are just cheaper than others. Idaho, Montana, and BC offer the same big time skiing that Utah and Colorado do, but at a much lower cost. I skied a 2000 vert, 2000 acre mountain on a powder day President's day last year for a $49 walk up ticket, and the longest line was 3 chairs. Second, you have to sacrifice something to get the lower ticket cost, what you choose to give up is where you need to make decisions. If you want some of the most difficult lines inbounds at any ski area, Bridger Bowl is half the price of Snowbird. The downsides are the more difficult flight in, no lodging on site, and the 20 minute hike. If you want cruisers for days, Panorama BC is a much better value than Sun Valley, but it's not exactly the same luxurious experience or name brand, and I'm honestly not sure how to get to Invermere if you can't just drive.
Real snow riders don't do it because it's easy. Leave sun valley and big sky for the posers and wannabes.
I agree with most of these, however whistler should be number one. They also are on the epic pass, and I’ve never seen their lift lines get longer than 20 minutes.
Y’all need to get out to more east coast resorts
Aye aye captain 🫡
Sadly skiing is set up in such a way that you have to commit to a season pass or get an Epic or Ikon pass to be able to ski without hemorrhaging your money. I purchase my pass in June and then I don’t think about it. My home mountain Killington takes it out over three payments over six months. It also includes a Ikon pass. If you want cheap skiing like I did when I was raising my family we skied small feeder mountains. You know small areas with 1000 vertical or less and all fixed lifts. My pass at Killington allows me to push vouchers to friends for 50 percent off. I mostly brown bag it and eat on the lift except when I ski with my wife or kids, yeah they want no part of eating on the lift. Skiing has always been expensive but now it’s crazy town especially if you only ski a few days a year and have small children. Stay away from resorts and look for places that offer value, they are out there. In New England there are many places that are not over priced and there are plenty out west too. Loveland and A Basin are both great and I could spend days skiing both. Backcountry skiing is also a good option to break things up. Now that I am retired I have time for this. Enjoy the snow it’s wonderful.
We know! It's hard to efficiently book a trip without purchasing your lift access months in advance, but we're thankful for the remaining destination mountains that are at least relatively reasonable.
In Canada I would rank Fernie as a better value location than the other Canadian resorts. It has on resort lodging, better prices, great conditions and hot tub time machines :P It suffers the same drawback as Whitefish, not in a major city location or on a main highway.
Fernie is an excellent value on a good day, but you're also taking the risk of rain (which happens multiple times per season) and terrain closures (i.e. Polar Peak is closed for all but a handful of days each year).
@@PeakRankings Rain is a bigger concern at Whistler, rain days at Fernie are at the bottom while fresh snow falls up top. No different than most if not all Rockie mountain resorts. I even experienced a day like that and the snow conditions were way better than the snow in Lake Louis. When vacationing we can't pick the conditions, but Fernie on it's worst days has beat a lot of resorts on their best days.
Sierra at tahoe is a lot of fun
Didn't even have to mention whitefish's ski in ski out and montana is driveable if you are close enough
As an european its hard to understand how any of those resorts are considered cheap, when the most expensive resorts in austria like Sölden, Ischgl or St. Anton are all under 70 $.
They force people to buy season passes like Ikon and Epic pass. Vail corporation bought up a ton of resorts and jacked up daily passes. It use to be pretty cheap until recently.
@@MeanLaQueefa which completely blows for those of us who live out of stay and only ride 3/4 days a year.
Skiing in Japan's perfect powder snow and amazing public transportation for max $50 per day....
I think most of your followers are using ikon or epic passes. Daily pass prices matter very little. would be very interested to see a video on lodging cost with its relative value. For example, snow bird and Alta have some of the highest hotel room prices and very limited housing rental options.
Even with the ikon pass those mountains are super expensive if you stay at the base. Sandy UT is great but then you’re risking the road closures on powder days.
heading to north conway and wildcat
purgatory is a good one with cheap lift tickets
Red mountain lodge in Montana is only 89 for a full day and 64 for a half day. You just need to check conditions and see if the Palisades park area is open so you can get the full mountain
What do you use to record your videos and what settings do you use on the camera?
You can see our full list of gear here: a.co/7etxWH3
For our GoPro Hero7, we use the 2.7K at 60fps setting.
@@PeakRankings I was wondering about more specific settings. I run mine at the exact same res and framerate but can't get good quality footage. I think doing a whole video on your filming setup would be a great idea.
@@spennyclxps1051 that is a great idea!
I really thinks A basin should be in the top 5. You can get tickets during the Week for $80
Love seeing Baker (#3 on the list) on here! Everything said is true, but I would add to stay in the town of Bellingham for a fun time
Baker is the one of my favorite best in Washington
Baker sucks don’t go worst mountain in wa stay away
Little Cottonwood Sucks! You really don't want to bother...
Thank you for leaving the 'unknown mom n pops' out. I only cringed at one in the content and three in the runners up. Good vid.
So Grand Targhee is $135 and way better than anything in Utah... Go there! You won't regret it... And you get to ski the Tetons... OOOOH. 🙂
Dude the biggest skiresorts in Europe are much cheaper than this
isnt 100% slow...stationary?
Kinda surprised Taos didn’t at least get an honorable mention. Phenomenal mountain and they have some very good advanced ticket prices. Otherwise, you definitely nailed all of my picks.
Average Taos lift ticket is now $161, so it was a bit expensive to make this list using the methodology we had. However, as you stated, the mountain is still a great deal if you book off-peak weekday tickets in advance (with rates as low as $95).
Curios how Schweitzer is just an honorable mention?
Since we already had Baker and Whitefish so far up the list (both of which undercut Schweitzer's ticket prices), we made the call to leave more space in the video to highlight mountains from other regions.
@@PeakRankings makes sense! I would love to see your mountain review of Schweitzer. And many of the other PNW and Western Canadian mountains 😀😀
Bachelor. Big whiff😁
Or .... you could go to Europe and ski resorts that are bigger than these 10 combined , for , wait for it ... $75.
You people need to come to Europe, ski tickets are a third of the price of these you mentioned
We're trying to keep Whitefish quiet. You aren't helping.
You left out so many affordable ski resorts. Might want to do a little more research.
$200 for a day ticket is "insane value" LMAO wtf
am I the only person who really dislikes that sound effect when the video moves to the next on the list? it always startles me, and it sounds jarring. Also, sounds like a basketball. if you're going to use a generic sound effect, use something skiing-related, like a swoosh of skis through snow or whatever. Or just a musical chord.
You are ruining ski resorts
This video is basically pointless.....as almost everyone with a brain gets a pass for multiple resorts capabilities.
Whistler is really on cheap for Americans because of the exchange rate. And when you do the math, food, gas, canadian flights, taxes, etc, all make it extremely expensive for Canadians
Its still expensive