Home to 28 ski areas and resorts, Colorado offers some of the most epic trails and thrilling rides you’ll be able to find.
Skiing not for you? Colorado has plenty of other ways to fill a winter-vacation itinerary. From snow tubing and snowmobiling to adaptive snowshoeing and sleigh rides, find winter trip ideas (including some that don't start with "s") all across the state.
Arapahoe Basin
Best known for having one of the longest ski seasons in North America (often from mid-October to early June), A-Basin also boasts North America’s highest elevation terrain park and its own “beach,” the infamous early-riser parking lot, which serves as home base for concerts, parties and tailgating.
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Aspen Highlands
When new snow at Aspen Highlands reaches mammoth proportions, you’re in for a epic day of Colorado’s signature light-and-dry powder. Insiders at the ski area recommend studying the trail map to find hidden gems that drop into gladed, untouched expert areas.
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Adaptive ski and snowboard info
Aspen Mountain
While Aspen is known throughout the world as a posh winter playground, more skiers are discovering the mountain’s challenging double blacks and chutes. In town, stop into the numerous galleries and the Aspen Art Museum or see a show at the Wheeler Opera House or the Harris Concert Hall.
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Adaptive ski and snowboard info
Beaver Creek Resort
Beaver Creek charms with fantastic extras: Heated moving walkways, fresh-baked cookies, a first-tracks program for early risers, a white-carpet club, wine-and-snowshoe excursions and acres of corduroy and powder waiting for skiers and riders to swish through.
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Adaptive ski and snowboard info
Breckenridge Ski Resort
Breckenridge is one of North America’s most popular resorts, in part because of its variety of terrain: long groomed trails, monster mogul runs, steep chutes, glades and plenty of family-friendly beginner areas. The resort was also one of the first to allow snowboarding on its slopes, and its terrain park is arguably one of the best in North America.
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Adaptive ski and snowboard info
Buttermilk
Buttermilk has a well-earned reputation as a great venue for beginner skiers and snowboarders. Wide, rolling trails are ideal for those just getting their snow legs, and none of its runs are rated expert. For more than two decades, it has been the home of ESPN’s Winter X Games, where the likes of Olympians Shaun White, Hannah Teter, local Gretchen Bleiler and many more have captured snowboarding medals.
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Adaptive ski and snowboard info
Copper Mountain
People who ski and ride Copper love to tout its perfect layout. They have Mother Nature to thank for arranging its slopes so adeptly: Beginner, intermediate and expert runs are each clustered with like-leveled terrain, ensuring beginners won’t make a surprise trip to the top of a steep, mogul-laden run.
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Adaptive ski and snowboard info
Crested Butte Mountain Resort
Crested Butte has it all: wide-open green and blue trails, expert bowls and plenty of unexplored lines and uncrowded slopes. One thing to really take advantage of, however, is the CB Backcountry Guide. Professional instructors teach would-be backcountry enthusiasts how to navigate safely and explore untouched powder.
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Adaptive ski and snowboard info
Echo Mountain Resort
Just south of Idaho Springs you'll find 60 acres of skiable terrain, making it the closest ski resort to Denver. Complete with a redesigned lodge featuring a restaurant and bar overlooking the Continental Divide, Echo Mountain is an affordable option for skiers and boarders along the Front Range. For those who can’t get up there before the work day ends, the slopes are open til 9pm for skiing under the stars.
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Eldora Mountain Resort
Eldora’s proximity to Boulder and Denver is one of the reasons it’s known as a “locals’ mountain.” The fact that they have terrain to keep the whole family busy all day doesn’t hurt either. The Eldora Nordic Center features a network of nearly 25 miles of peaceful cross-country ski and snowshoe trails just steps from the downhill ski area.
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Adaptive ski and snowboard info
Granby Ranch
Ski Granby Ranch’s fun lesson programs, easy pace and affordable prices make it a long-time family favorite. There’s no better place to wind down at the end of the day than the fire pit at the base of the mountain, where the hot cocoa flows and everyone recounts the day’s snowy triumphs.
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Hesperus Ski Area
Eleven miles west of Durango, Hesperus has been is an especially great option for families in the southwest part of Colorado since 1962, and it's the region's largest night-skiing operation. Hesperus' unassuming, small-ski-area ambiance makes its 26 trails and 160 acres an idyllic winter escape. Note: Hesperus will not operate for the 2024/2025 season.
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Howelsen Hill Ski Area
Routinely in the shadow of its much larger neighbor, Steamboat, it's easy to forget Howelsen's pedigree. Open since 1915, it's the oldest ski area in Colorado, has the largest natural ski-jumping complex in North America and has long been a training ground for Olympic skiers. It’s also one a handful of resorts in Colorado to offer after-dark skiing. Floating through the night beneath the glow of the slope’s lights is an other-worldly experience.
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