Blog
/
/
Should Your Ski Resort Still Be on X/Twitter? Here’s What the Data Actually Says

Should Your Ski Resort Still Be on X/Twitter? Here’s What the Data Actually Says

Ski resort social media audit infographic
The data is in: most ski resorts have already quietly moved on from X/Twitter. The question is whether yours should too.

Only 26% of ski resorts are still actively posting on X/Twitter in 2026, down from roughly two-thirds just two years ago. SlopeFillers tracked 50 resorts across a range of sizes and ownership structures, and the data tells a clear story about where the industry’s 2026 social media strategy for ski resorts attention is going.

What the Data Shows

In January 2026, just 13 of 50 resorts had posted on X in the current year. A full 74% had either gone silent or were posting only during desperate pass-deadline pushes. Notably, several resorts had updated their website icons to X but hadn’t actually posted in years, icon changes don’t equal activity.

The drop wasn’t gradual, it bunches around 2024-2025, suggesting the Twitter-to-X rebrand and associated platform turbulence triggered a real re-evaluation of time investment at marketing teams across the industry.

Cartoon skier posting ski content on social media
Your guests create great ski content too, the question is which platforms you want that content to live on.

Where Should Your Resort Be Instead?

The resorts still active on X tend to be using it for specific high-leverage moments: emergency weather alerts, pass sale deadlines, or breaking news like a major lift announcement. That’s a reasonable use case, but it doesn’t require a daily presence.

The bigger social opportunity right now is in platforms where ski content actually thrives: TikTok and Instagram Reels for short-form video, YouTube for deeper resort storytelling, and even Spotify (Steamboat just launched a resort-branded album). Meet your guests where they’re actually watching ski content.

Platform comparison infographic
Use X for alerts, Instagram and TikTok for visual ski storytelling, and YouTube for deeper stories.

The Right Framework for Platform Decisions

Ask where your audience actually is: Check your analytics. Which platform drove the most referral traffic to your site in the last 90 days? That’s where you double down.

Match content format to platform: X rewards text and fast opinion. If you’re not producing that, the format doesn’t fit. Instagram and TikTok reward visual skiing content, which you have in abundance.

Maintenance mode is fine: You don’t need to delete your X account. Set up a simple post queue for major announcements only, and redirect your team’s daily energy to higher-ROI platforms.

One Caveat: B2B Relationships Live on X

If your marketing director is using X to network with industry contacts, journalists, and resort operators, that’s different from guest marketing, and worth keeping. X still has real value for industry professionals. Just separate that from your resort’s public-facing content strategy.

Action Item

Run a 90-day social audit today. Measure follower growth, engagement rate, and referral traffic per platform. Let the numbers decide your Q3 social calendar allocation, not platform nostalgia.

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.

Get the Blueprint

Weekly AI tools, ski industry insights, and marketing strategy. Free — unsubscribe anytime.

Share this article: