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PNW Pass Wars: How to Win the 2026-27 Early-Buy Season Right Now

PNW Pass Wars: How to Win the 2026-27 Early-Buy Season Right Now

Pass renewal season is open across the Pacific Northwest and it is competitive. The Seattle Times is covering what’s changing for Washington ski areas in 2026-27. OregonLive is reporting that at least one major Oregon ski area is offering steeply discounted passes as skiers debate whether to commit after a difficult 2025-26 winter. If you’re running a regional resort in the PNW — or watching how the pass wars unfold nationally — this week’s news has lessons for your sales strategy.

Ski resort operator comparing season pass products and pass renewal strategy
Pass renewal season in the PNW is heating up with discounts and new incentives as resorts compete for early-buy commitments from frustrated 2025-26 skiers.

Why This Season’s Conditions Make Pass Sales Harder

After a below-average snow season across much of the West, a meaningful audience segmentation for ski resorts of passholders feel burned. They paid full price for a pass and got limited return. The natural reaction is to delay the renewal decision or look for a lower-commitment option. This is the exact moment when your messaging and your offer structure matter most — because a hesitant guest who renews early is a building a loyal ski resort audience guest. One who waits becomes a prospect for your competitors.

The Early-Buy Playbook: What’s Working Right Now

The resorts winning the early-buy season in 2026 are doing a few things consistently:

  • Acknowledging the season honestly. Emails that open with “we know this winter was tough” outperform those that pretend it didn’t happen.
  • Leading with capital commitments. Announcing snowmaking upgrades, new lifts, or terrain improvements in the same breath as the renewal offer gives guests a reason to believe next year will be better.
  • Tiered pricing windows. Early-bird pricing that expires on a real deadline drives urgency without requiring a discount off your core pass price.
  • Flexible options. After a tough season, guests want optionality. Day add-ons, buddy ticket bundles, and multi-year lock-ins with escape clauses all reduce friction.
Ski resort season pass comparison showing early sales vs late sales performance
Resorts that launch early-bird pass sales before June consistently outsell those that wait until fall — even in low-snow recovery years.

Pass Product Comparison: PNW 2026-27 Landscape

Pass Product Key Resorts (PNW) Price Signal Best For
Ikon’s remote control ad campaign breakdown Pass Crystal, Stevens Pass, Mt. Bachelor Premium, stable Frequent multi-resort skiers
Epic Pass Whistler, Park City (no major PNW) Premium Destination + BC skiers
Mt. Hood Meadows Season Pass Mt. Hood Meadows Discounted (2026) Oregon locals, value-focused
Indy Pass Multiple regional independents Budget-friendly Explorers, occasional skiers

Your Move This Week

If your resort hasn’t launched its early-bird pass campaign, you’re already behind the market. Start with an honest, empathetic email to your existing passholders. Announce one concrete improvement for 2026-27. Give them a real deadline to act on early pricing. The window where motivated skiers are actively looking for a reason to commit is right now — and it closes faster than most resort marketers expect.

For season pass tools and benchmarking, check out what NSAA has in their member resources, or explore SlopeFillers for real-world pass marketing case studies.

Sources: The Seattle Times, OregonLive

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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