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Colorado Ski Resorts

Colorado is North America's highest, driest, lightest snow — the Rockies between roughly 9,000 and 13,000 feet. SnowSure tracks the major Colorado resorts in real time: the Vail Resorts mountains (Vail, Beaver Creek, Breckenridge, Keystone), Aspen Skiing Company's four mountains, and the Ikon Pass anchors (Steamboat, Winter Park, Copper).

Colorado — ranked by SnowSure™ score

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Skiing in Colorado — FAQ

What's the deepest Colorado resort?
Wolf Creek, in the southern San Juans, averages the highest annual snowfall in Colorado (~430 inches). Steamboat, Crested Butte, and Aspen Highlands round out the top tier. SnowSure's live depth leaderboard shows the current standings.
Vail or Aspen?
Vail is bigger and more groomed-cruiser-friendly; Aspen offers four very different mountains (Highlands for steeps, Snowmass for size, Buttermilk for beginners, Aspen Mountain for the town experience). The Epic Pass covers Vail, the Ikon Pass covers Aspen.
When does Colorado skiing peak?
Mid-January through late March. December is good but variable; April skiing is excellent at higher resorts (A-Basin, Loveland, Breckenridge stays open into May or June).