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How Smart Resorts Capitalize on Late-Season Storm Cycles

How Smart Resorts Capitalize on Late-Season Storm Cycles

Heavenly Mountain Resort in Lake Tahoe just reopened for a surprise weekend after 25 inches of late-April snow. Copper Mountain extended its season all the way to May 3. And Sugarloaf in Maine is skiing through April 26. Late-season storm cycles are gifts — but only if your resort has a playbook ready to run the moment the snow starts falling.

Heavenly Mountain Resort late season powder reopening Lake Tahoe
Heavenly’s April 18-19 reopening after 25 inches of fresh snow turned what looked like a closed season into a viral spring skiing moment.

The 6-Hour Marketing Window That Most Resorts Miss

When a late-season storm hits, the first six hours of 2026 social media strategy for ski resorts activity are your highest-leverage moment. Heavenly’s reopening announcement generated immediate traffic — both digital and on-mountain. The resorts that win this moment have three things ready before the storm even lands: a drafted email blast, a pre-built social media template, and a clear chain of approval for the “we’re opening” call. If you’re still writing the email when the lifts start spinning, you’re already losing the news cycle.

What to Have Ready Before Every Major Storm

Build a Late-Season Storm Response Kit and review it each April. It should include:

  • Email draft: Subject line, hero image slot, pre-written body with [DATE] and [INCHES] placeholders
  • Social copy: 3 variations (urgent, celebratory, FOMO-driven) for Instagram, Facebook, and X
  • Ticket/lift ticket pricing decision: Will you honor pass discounts? Offer spring day tickets? Make that call in advance so ops isn’t waiting on marketing.
  • Press contacts list: Local TV stations, regional outdoor outlets, and ski news aggregators who cover last-chance powder days
Ski resort marketing team responding to powder day social media spike
A coordinated storm-day social push can drive same-day lift ticket sales that offset the entire cost of extending operations by a weekend.

The Season Extension Math

Copper’s decision to run through May 3 wasn’t sentimental — it was financial. A strong snowpack plus strong late-season demand equals profitable extra operating days. The key metric to track: daily break-even lift ticket count. If you can hit that number with reasonable confidence given the snowpack, you extend. If your resort doesn’t have this number calculated and updated seasonally, that’s the first thing to fix before next spring.

Messaging That Works for Late-Season Skiers

Late-season skiers are a different buyer than peak-season guests. They’re more likely to be locals, more likely to be pass holders, and more likely to share their experience on social media. Your messaging should lean into:

  • “Last chance” framing — scarcity is real and felt
  • The quality of spring skiing (corn snow, sunny laps, uncrowded runs)
  • Urgency that’s honest — “This might be the last powder day of the season”

Heavenly’s surprise reopening is a case study in what happens when the mountain, the ops team, and the marketing team move together on a tight clock. That synchronization is a competitive advantage worth building year-round.

Written by
CR
CR is a longtime ski industry professional who spent years driving results inside Fortune 500 companies across technology, marketing, and corporate training before turning that expertise toward the mountain. Now focused on the intersection of ski resort operations and AI, CR builds proprietary tools and frameworks that help resorts identify inefficiencies, unlock new revenue, and create real leverage — without the overhead of traditional agencies or consultants.

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