While some resorts are shutting down, others are extending — and the gap between those two strategies is growing. This April, one of Tahoe’s biggest ski areas is reopening for spring skiing after a weather window opened up. Copper Mountain is pushing through late season in Colorado despite a historically difficult winter. Meanwhile, Maine resorts wrap their season as skiers shift attention back east. The takeaway: resorts that can flex their operational calendar are capturing revenue their rigid competitors are leaving on the table.


The Economics of Extended Operations
Late-season skiing has different economics than peak winter. Your fixed costs (ski instructor staffing lessons, snowmaking infrastructure) are largely sunk. If the snow is there and the demand exists, extending operations is nearly pure margin. The challenge is knowing when conditions justify the cost and when they don’t. Resorts that have mastered this calculation — using snowpack data, booking velocity, and historical demand curves — open and close on a data-driven calendar instead of a traditional one.
Spring Skiing Is a Different Product — Market It That Way
Corn snow, t-shirt weather, and slushy aprés are a completely different sell than powder and cold. Resorts that treat spring skiing as “the tail end of real ski season” are missing the opportunity. Resorts that position it as its own experience — warmer, more social, more approachable for beginners — consistently outperform on late-season revenue strategy bookings. Your spring marketing message should look almost nothing like your December message.
What “Climate-Adaptive Operations” Actually Looks Like
Smart resorts are investing in snowpack monitoring infrastructure, partnering with avalanche and mountain weather services for better mid-range forecasting, and building operational flexibility into their staffing models. The goal isn’t to fight the mountain — it’s to be ready to move when windows open. That might mean reopening for a weekend in April. It might mean shutting down two weeks early in a bad year to preserve brand reputation. The data-driven resort can do both without the internal chaos that usually accompanies those decisions.
Snow Storage: The Underrated Extended Season Tool
Snow storage is quietly growing in popularity across North American ski areas. Resorts are banking compressed snow piles through spring, then using it to extend operations into late season or to jumpstart early-season openings. It’s not cheap to implement, but the ROI on even two additional operating weekends can be significant — especially for pass resorts where additional open days directly convert to pass holder satisfaction and renewal rates.
Your Action Plan
First: define your minimum viable late-season operation — what does it take in snowpack, staffing, and demand to justify staying open? Put that number in writing before next season starts. Second: create a spring skiing content package that positions your late-season experience as a destination, not an afterthought. Third: if you haven’t explored snow storage, request a feasibility study from your Snowbird’s capital planning model planning team this spring. The window to plan for it is now.



