Vail Resorts just dropped their season metrics for the period ending April 19, 2026 — and Bloomberg reported results landed at the low end of guidance due to a dearth of snow. This isn’t just a Wall Street story. It’s a marketing wake-up call for every resort team watching from the sidelines.
Every resort — from a mega-corporation like Vail down to a 3-lift community hill — faces the same structural vulnerability: a slice of your revenue is hostage to the weather. The real question isn’t whether snowfall matters. It does. The question is how much of your guest relationship is built on snowpack versus built on something you actually control.

The Numbers Tell a Familiar Story
Vail’s season metrics release on April 23rd cited poor snowfall as the primary driver for landing at the bottom of their guidance range. This isn’t a one-time anomaly — the industry has watched snow variability become more pronounced over the past decade. NSAA’s economic analyses have consistently shown that skier visit totals in key Western markets correlate strongly with snowfall, but the resorts that weather poor snow years best are the ones that built their marketing around the guest relationship first — not the conditions report.
Vail’s scale insulates them somewhat: 40+ resorts, a diversified pass product, deep CRM infrastructure. But the earnings miss still happened. What does that say for resorts with half the resources and a single mountain?
Weather Dependency Is a Marketing Design Flaw
I’ve watched this play out at resorts that survive — and even grow — through low-snow winters. Their marketing calendar doesn’t start in November when the snowguns fire up. It starts in May when the last chairlift stops spinning. They’re emailing, surveying, and staying in front of their guests through summer and fall, building an emotional connection to the place — the community, the terrain, the vibe — not just powder conditions.
The resorts that hurt the most in a bad snow year? They were reactive. Snow falls → blast the email list → hope guests book. That’s not a marketing program. That’s a weather service subscription. We covered how urgency-driven marketing separates the winners in our breakdown of Ikon Pass deadline strategy — the same behavioral logic applies to every resort’s off-season engagement.

Three Things Smart Resort Teams Are Doing Right Now
- Running a post-season guest survey — While the season is fresh, find out why guests came (or didn’t), what would bring them back, and what matters most beyond snow. That data shapes every off-season campaign.
- Segmenting CRM by weather sensitivity — Your 5-visit loyalists booked passes before they knew the snowpack. Your 1-visit guests probably Googled “powder day” before committing. Market to each group differently with different value props.
- Anchoring early pass sales to non-weather benefits — Community events, terrain park access, summer activities, early openings, friends-and-family perks. Build the value case before anyone even looks at a snowfall forecast.

What Comes Next
After a tough snow season in Colorado, we saw some resorts bounce back quickly when late-season storms hit — while others struggled to fill rooms even with fresh powder. The difference wasn’t always conditions. It was the relationship those marketing teams had already built. Ski Area Management has covered this trend for years: operational resilience starts with marketing infrastructure, not snowmaking capacity.
Vail’s earnings report is a case study in scale, but the lesson is universal. Weather is a variable you can’t control. Your guest relationship is one you absolutely can. The resorts that survive the next low-snow year — and the one after that — are the ones building that relationship right now.
What does your off-season marketing calendar look like this year? Are you staying in front of your guests from May through October, or going quiet until the snowguns start up? I’d genuinely love to hear what’s working at your resort.



