Park City Mountain is eliminating one of its last remaining free parking areas for next season. According to The Salt Lake Tribune, the move signals that even the largest ski resorts in the country are running out of ways to absorb the cost of running a world-class mountain without charging for amenities that used to feel like a given. Whether you’re running a 500-acre independent resort or a 5,000-acre destination mountain, this conversation is coming to your doorstep if it hasn’t already.

Free Parking Was Always a Subsidy — Just a Hidden One
I’ve sat in enough marketing and ops meetings to know that “free” parking was never actually free. It’s always been a cost buried somewhere else — in lift ticket prices, F&B margins, or pass pricing. The shift to explicit parking fees is really just making that cost visible. The interesting marketing question isn’t whether to charge for parking — it’s how you communicate it without burning guest goodwill. Park City is going to find out the hard way that the announcement matters almost as much as the policy itself.
How is your resort currently thinking about parking as part of the guest experience equation? Is it a revenue line or a brand promise?
The Guest Experience Trade-Off Nobody Talks About
Here’s the tension that keeps resort marketers up at night. The skiing industry runs on the promise of escape — fresh air, mountain views, the exact opposite of a city parking garage. The moment you slap a $25 parking fee on the experience, you’ve introduced a friction point that feels out of place with the brand promise. Ski Area Management has covered how destination resorts are navigating this with transit incentives and premium parking tiers, but those solutions require infrastructure investment most mid-size resorts don’t have budget for.

What Smart Resorts Are Doing Instead
The best-handled parking transitions I’ve seen share a few things in common. First, they lead with the benefit — ski-in/ski-out reserved spots, covered parking, heated walkways — rather than leading with the fee. Second, they bundle it. A parking pass included in season pass renewal is a much softer message than “parking now costs $20/day.” Third, they introduce it gradually — a pilot program for weekends, then a full rollout with a season of data to back up the decision.
If Park City handles the rollout well, they’ll offset the backlash with better arrival experiences. If they don’t, they’ll spend a lot of that parking revenue on reputation management. We saw a version of this play out with the Epic Pass sales tax controversy — how you announce a cost increase matters almost as much as the increase itself. Check out our breakdown of Vail’s pricing transparency lesson if you want to see how that one landed.

The Broader Amenity Monetization Trend
Parking is just the most visible piece of a bigger shift in how ski resorts think about amenity revenue. Lockers, rentals, ski school — all of it is being repriced to reflect actual costs. NSAA data consistently shows that ancillary revenue per visit is a key differentiator between resorts with healthy margins and those struggling to break even. The challenge is that skiers have a sharp sense of value, and they’ll remember the day the free parking disappeared long after they’ve forgotten what they paid for a lift ticket.
The right answer probably isn’t “free for everyone forever” — that’s not sustainable. But it’s also not “charge everything and see what sticks.” The resorts navigating this best are the ones treating it as a guest experience design problem, not a revenue extraction problem. What’s your resort’s approach? Have you already made the switch, or are you still holding free parking as a competitive advantage? I’d be curious where your team lands on this.



