Best 

 Peaks Overall

The rank-order of West Coast ski resorts we’ve been to based on overall mountain experience.

#1 West Coast

Whistler Blackcomb

Whistler, BC

Whistler, BC


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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82

  +   Pros
  • Size
  • Diverse terrain for all ability levels
  • Extremely demanding expert runs
  • Lift infrastructure
  • Stunning aesthetic
  –   Cons
  • Relatively variable conditions, especially in lower mountain areas
  • Crowd flow during peak times

Despite somewhat variable snow conditions, this massive resort delivers one of the most well-rounded experiences we’ve seen anywhere.

See our review →

#2 West Coast

Alyeska

Girdwood, AK

Girdwood, AK


MOUNTAIN SCORE

75

  +   Pros
  • High snowfall totals on average
  • Exceptional hike-to terrain
  • Beautiful views
  –   Cons
  • Snow totals can vary year to year
  • Much more remote location than typical resorts
  • Variable daylight hours

With world-class views, mettle-testing terrain, and staggering annual snow totals, the largest ski resort in the Last Frontier offers an experience that is fittingly surreal for the famously remote state.

See our review →

#3 West Coast

Mammoth

Mammoth Lakes, CA

Mammoth Lakes, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

72

  +   Pros
  • Substantial footprint
  • Diverse variety of terrain
  • World-class terrain park setup
  • Breathtaking rock-lined landscapes
  • Phenomenal spring-skiing experience
  –   Cons
  • Variable weather patterns resulting in inconsistent conditions
  • Poorly-designed on-mountain signage
  • Lift chokepoints at some junctions

This massive resort offers a highly competitive experience only hours from Southern California, although variable weather patterns may not make it the best place to fly to.

See our review →

#4 West Coast

Palisades Tahoe

Olympic Valley, CA

Olympic Valley, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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72

  +   Pros
  • Wide variety of demanding expert terrain
  • Unique topography
  • Lively base village
  • Top-notch spring skiing experience
  • Large overall footprint
  –   Cons
  • Wind exposure, especially on beginner and low-intermediate terrain
  • Serious congestion issues in some areas
  • Variable openings for lower-elevation expert terrain
  • Impractical lift link between Palisades and Alpine sides
  • Considerable access road traffic on weekends and holidays

Two of Tahoe’s best ski areas have now been linked as one continuous lift-served destination, but the resort still functions as two separate mountains in many ways.

See our review →

#5 West Coast

Alpine Meadows

Alpine Meadows, CA

Alpine Meadows, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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70

  +   Pros
  • Local feel
  • Less tracked slopes than other Lake Tahoe resorts
  • Diverse, scenic terrain
  • Extremely demanding expert runs
  –   Cons
  • Long traverses to and from some terrain
  • No on-site lodging
  • Lack of true beginner terrain
  • Relatively short vertical drop

Alpine Meadows best delivers is a local, less-tracked terrain experience with some serious challenges.

See our review →

#6 West Coast

Bend, OR


MOUNTAIN SCORE

69

  +   Pros
  • One-of-a-kind 360-degree footprint
  • Substantial acreage
  • High-speed lift service across all areas
  • Distinctive freestyle experience
  • Easy to get between front-facing mountain areas
  • Proximity to town of Bend
  –   Cons
  • Extremely inconsistent openings for upper mountain, backside, and expert terrain
  • No on-site lodging
  • Variable conditions across different mountain areas
  • Arduous hikes or runouts from backside terrain
  • So-so facilities
  • Annual snow totals have decreased considerably in recent years

Inconsistent openings for its most unique terrain seriously hurt this massive Oregon resort’s practicality as a destination ski area.

See our review →

#7 West Coast

Heavenly

South Lake Tahoe, CA

South Lake Tahoe, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

69

  +   Pros
  • One-of-a-kind mountain aesthetic
  • Diverse terrain, including an abundance of glades and intermediate groomers
  • Ample mountain facilities
  • Size
  –   Cons
  • Frustrating navigation logistics
  • Long, painfully slow lifts in some areas
  • Lackluster beginner terrain
  • Difficult egress from some expert terrain

This Lake Tahoe area offers some of the most beautiful slopes we’ve seen anywhere. A few logistical problems diminish the resort’s size advantage.

See our review →

#8 West Coast

Kirkwood

Kirkwood, CA

Kirkwood, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

68

  +   Pros
  • One-of-a-kind extreme terrain
  • Local feel
  • Breathtaking mountain aesthetic
  • Low crowds
  • Snow quality for Lake Tahoe
  –   Cons
  • Slow lifts in most areas
  • Serious wind exposure that leads to regular wind holds
  • Many resort areas inaccessible for beginners and intermediates
  • Limited on-mountain facilities
  • Subpar resort signage

This relatively undeveloped mountain isn’t for everyone, but its striking aesthetic, local feel, and extreme terrain are tough to match.

See our review →

#9 West Coast

Crystal

Crystal Mountain, WA

Crystal Mountain, WA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

66

  +   Pros
  • Remarkable annual snowfall
  • Wide variety of demanding expert terrain
  • Available on-site lodging
  • Sizable footprint for Washington state
  • Striking surrounding scenery
  –   Cons
  • Wet, inconsistent snow
  • Poorly designed crowd flow logistics
  • Low-visibility conditions throughout winter months
  • Hiking required to reach several expert areas
  • Limited or impractical on-mountain facilities in some areas

Despite some notable lift capacity shortcomings, this decently-sized resort offers one of the most well-rounded experiences in Washington state.

See our review →

#10 West Coast

Sierra-at-Tahoe

Twin Bridges, CA

Twin Bridges, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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66

  +   Pros
  • Diverse bowl and tree terrain
  • Excellent freestyle experience
  • Local feel
  –   Cons
  • No on-site lodging
  • Expert terrain is unpatrolled and subject to particularly variable openings

While it can’t boast the same crazy lake views, striking terrain, or expansive base village as some other Tahoe areas, this moderately-sized resort offers reasonable prices and a local feel.

See our review →

#11 West Coast

Mount Baker

Deming, WA

Deming, WA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

65

  +   Pros
  • Top-tier snowfall
  • Remote, local feel
  • Extraordinary surrounding scenery
  • Truly demanding in-bounds terrain
  • Easy sidecountry access
  –   Cons
  • Very limited groomed terrain
  • No lodging within 30 miles of the area
  • Heavier powder than some other resorts
  • Somewhat variable early-season conditions
  • Terrain, lifts, and base facilities partially closed on weekdays
  • Overcast skies most days

While it doesn’t even try to offer a true resort experience, this remote Washington area receives truly astounding snowfall totals each season and offers some of the most extreme terrain in the state.

See our review →

#12 West Coast

Northstar

Truckee, CA

Truckee, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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65

  +   Pros
  • Excellent grooming operations
  • Easily skiable woods
  • High-speed lifts
  • Unique terrain park experience
  –   Cons
  • Merely ordinary terrain diversity
  • No expert or above-treeline slopes
  • Variable glade terrain openings
  • Commercialized, moneyed feel

This family-friendly resort offers excellent grooming and a top-tier terrain park, but expert and above-treeline terrain is lacking.

See our review →

#13 West Coast

Bear Valley

Bear Valley, CA

Bear Valley, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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63

  +   Pros
  • Varied and surprisingly challenging terrain
  • Impressive views
  • Isolated feel with low crowds
  • Unique and interesting mountain layout
  –   Cons
  • Dated lift infrastructure and facilities
  • Poor resiliency in key mountain areas
  • Large proportion of terrain footprint is not lift-served

This Northern California resort has interesting terrain for skiers and riders of all ability levels as well as a unique and isolated feel, but it lacks the infrastructure to fully compete with the best resorts in the state.

See our review →

#14 West Coast

Sugar Bowl

Norden, CA

Norden, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

63

  +   Pros
  • Terrain for all ability levels
  • Extremely demanding expert footprint
  • Unique, rock-formed landscapes
  • Snow quality for Tahoe
  • Vintage gondola
  –   Cons
  • Short vertical drop
  • Modest footprint
  • Flat runouts in some areas
  • Some expert terrain almost never open

This California resort can’t match the acreage and vertical drop of competing Tahoe mountains, but it stands out with trails for all ability levels and an extremely demanding expert footprint.

See our review →

#15 West Coast

Mount Rose

Reno, NV

Reno, NV


MOUNTAIN SCORE

63

  +   Pros
  • High-quality snow
  • Unique glade terrain
  • Demanding Chutes expert terrain
  • Views of Reno
  –   Cons
  • Horrendous wind exposure, leading to lift shutdowns and scoured slopes
  • Modest footprint
  • Limited lake views
  • Variable openings for Chutes expert area

Despite its high elevation, a number of shortcomings detract from this Nevada mountain’s appeal as a destination resort.

See our review →

#16 West Coast

Mt Hood, OR


MOUNTAIN SCORE

61

  +   Pros
  • Unique high-alpine terrain for all ability levels
  • High-speed lift service
  • Progressive freestyle setup
  • Extremely challenging expert footprint
  • Striking mountain vistas
  • Available night skiing
  –   Cons
  • Windswept, icy conditions at times
  • Extremely inconsistent openings for high-alpine terrain
  • Large crowds, especially when high-alpine areas are closed
  • Extensive hiking required to reach some terrain
  • Arduous catwalk out of expert Private Reserve area

Mount Hood’s largest ski resort boasts diverse terrain and a reasonably large footprint. High-alpine areas are subject to extremely variable openings.

See our review →

#17 West Coast

49 Degrees North

Chewelah, WA

Chewelah, WA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

60

  +   Pros
  • Local feel
  • Low crowds
  • Lighter snow than Washington resorts further west
  –   Cons
  • Modest vertical drop
  • Limited true beginner terrain
  • Slow lifts in most areas

Despite its dated lift infrastructure and rural setting, this Northeast Washington resort offers impressive intermediate and advanced terrain at a reasonable price.

See our review →

#18 West Coast

Stevens Pass

Skykomish, WA

Skykomish, WA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

59

  +   Pros
  • Generous snow accumulation
  • Diverse advanced and expert terrain
  • Competitive terrain park experience
  • Available night skiing
  • Local feel
  –   Cons
  • Perennial foggy, low-visibility conditions
  • No on-site lodging
  • Limited parking and inconvenient overflow lots
  • Short vertical drop
  • Very little beginner terrain
  • Limited on-mountain facilities outside base area

Despite limited parking and a short vertical drop, this modestly-sized Washington ski area punches above its weight thanks to generous accumulation and demanding terrain. Clear skies are rare due to perennial fog.

See our review →

#19 West Coast

China Peak

Lakeshore, CA

Lakeshore, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

59

  +   Pros
  • Low crowds
  • Sunny slopes
  • Solid intermediate-to-advanced terrain for the size
  • Easy access from Fresno
  –   Cons
  • Slow lifts
  • Limited beginner terrain
  • Variable snowfall totals
  • Lift ticket prices

While it’s no substitute for a true destination ski resort, this Central California mountain offers admirable terrain variety within a convenient driving distance of Fresno.

See our review →

#20 West Coast

Timberline Lodge

Government Camp, OR

Government Camp, OR


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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58

  +   Pros
  • Year-round ski season
  • World-class terrain parks
  • Distinctive high-alpine snowfields
  • Rustic, historic lodge
  • High-speed lifts
  • Available night skiing
  –   Cons
  • Resort never spins 100% of lifts, with high-alpine areas closed during the winter and lower elevations closed during summer
  • Inconsistent conditions during winter months
  • Very little true advanced and expert terrain
  • Lift logistics that result in chokepoints and long lines

North America’s only four-season outdoor ski resort provides a one-of-a-kind summer experience but fails to stand out during the core winter season.

See our review →

#21 West Coast

Diamond Peak

Incline Village, NV

Incline Village, NV


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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57

  +   Pros
  • Excellent lake views
  • Superb grooming operations
  • Lack of crowds
  • Impressive freestyle terrain
  • Unique off-piste glade areas
  –   Cons
  • Small, exceptionally narrow footprint
  • Slow lifts in many areas
  • Somewhat limited on-mountain facilities
  • Variable conditions, especially in glade terrain
  • Day ticket prices

This Tahoe mountain will impress many visitors with breathtaking lake views, but its terrain and amenities are no match for the area’s better-known destination resorts.

See our review →

#22 West Coast

Willamette Pass

Cascade Summit, OR

Cascade Summit, OR


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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56

  +   Pros
  • Incredible off-peak ticket deals
  • Great annual snowfall
  • Diverse advanced terrain
  • Unique views of Oregon’s high alpine lakes
  –   Cons
  • Lackluster intermediate terrain
  • Complete lack of signage and mapping
  • Smaller food and beverage facilities
  • Not comparable in size to larger Oregon destinations
  • Peak day tickets can be pricy

Eugene's closest ski resort functions more as a local's mountain than a regional contender, but it does offer varied terrain and impressive snowfall for a relatively cheap price.

See our review →

#23 West Coast

Homewood

Homewood, CA

Homewood, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

56

  +   Pros
  • One-of-a-kind mountain aesthetic, including astonishing lake views
  • Excellent glade terrain
  • Extraordinary accumulation in good seasons
  • Low wind exposure compared to other Tahoe resorts
  –   Cons
  • Inadequate resiliency measures for bad seasons
  • No direct lift operations in some areas on weekdays
  • Slow lifts, some of which don’t have safety bars, in many areas
  • Very limited on-mountain facilities
  • Frustrating traverses to get to or from many trails

While this Tahoe hill can’t hold its own overall against the destination resorts, it boasts an astonishing, one-of-a-kind mountain aesthetic.

See our review →

#24 West Coast

Dodge Ridge

Pinecrest, CA

Pinecrest, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

55

  +   Pros
  • Ease of access from Bay Area
  • Family-friendly footprint
  • Lower traffic than Tahoe resorts
  –   Cons
  • Primitive snowmaking system, leading to inconsistent terrain openings
  • Slow lifts
  • No on-site lodging

The closest ski area to the Bay Area offers lower traffic than Tahoe, but it’s hurt by limited snowmaking and outdated lift infrastructure.

See our review →

#25 West Coast

Alpental

Snoqualmie Pass, WA

Snoqualmie Pass, WA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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54

  +   Pros
  • High annual snowfall
  • Convenient location from Seattle
  • Incredible advanced and expert terrain
  • Striking on-mountain scenery
  • Limited lower-mountain night-skiing
  –   Cons
  • Small footprint
  • Extremely limited beginner and intermediate terrain
  • No lift redundancies, leading to horrendous weekend and holiday crowds
  • Limited, capacity-constrained facilities
  • Wet, inconsistent snow quality
  • Perennial fog during peak winter months

This small resort offers incredible advanced and expert terrain close to Seattle. However, weekend crowds are a major problem.

See our review →

#26 West Coast

McCloud, CA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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52

  +   Pros
  • Views of the Southern Cascades, especially up toward Shasta itself
  • Surprisingly reliable cover thanks to large snowmaking system and deep snowpack
  • Diverse selection of intermediate terrain, including glades and short bowls
  • Easy access to great backcountry
  –   Cons
  • Lack of true advanced and expert terrain
  • Slow lifts
  • So-so grooming
  • Separate peaks make for short lappable vertical drop
  • Major hassle to get to and from new expansion area

The only decently-sized California ski area north of Tahoe offers limited lift lines and stunning views of the Southern Cascades, but it’s hurt by uncompetitive infrastructure and a bizarrely-integrated recent expansion.

See our review →

#27 West Coast

Mount Ashland

Ashland, OR

Ashland, OR


MOUNTAIN SCORE

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52

  +   Pros
  • Surprisingly extensive advanced and expert terrain
  • Local feel, both on the mountain and at the base lodge
  • Great views of surrounding area
  • Ease of access from Ashland
  –   Cons
  • Tiny size
  • Comparatively small annual snowfall for region
  • Difficult progression from beginner to intermediate slopes

This southern Oregon resort suffers from its tiny size and dated infrastructure, though surprisingly extensive advanced terrain and great views help it stand out among local resorts.

See our review →

#28 West Coast

Mount Hood Skibowl

Government Camp, OR

Government Camp, OR


MOUNTAIN SCORE

51

  +   Pros
  • Local feel
  • Low crowds
  • Extensive night-skiing footprint
  • Advanced bowl terrain
  • Beginner terrain off every lift
  –   Cons
  • Ancient, difficult-to-load chairlifts
  • No daytime operations on weekdays
  • Limited acreage and vertical drop
  • Lower-quality snow than higher-elevation Hood resorts
  • Variable openings for expert Outback area

This small, no-frills mountain offers less crowded slopes and extensive night skiing close to Portland.

See our review →

#29 West Coast

Summit at Snoqualmie

Snoqualmie Pass, WA

Snoqualmie Pass, WA


MOUNTAIN SCORE

50

  +   Pros
  • High annual snowfall
  • Convenient location from Seattle
  • Extensive selection of bunny hills
  • Available night skiing
  –   Cons
  • Wet, heavy snow
  • Meager vertical drop
  • Slow lifts with no safety bars in many areas
  • I-90 highway background noise
  • Summit East closed on weekdays

Really more of a large hill than a mountain, this area offers a solid learning environment for Seattle-area residents. Destination-goers should look elsewhere.

See our review →