Blog
/
/
What Heavenly’s Late-Season Reopening Teaches Resorts About Closing Day Strategy

What Heavenly’s Late-Season Reopening Teaches Resorts About Closing Day Strategy

Heavenly Mountain Resort closed for the season — then 25 inches of late April snow changed everything. The resort announced a two-day reopening on April 18-19, forcing a rapid pivot in operations, ski instructor staffing lessons, and communications. If your resort doesn’t have a framework for this scenario, you’re not ready for the upside when late-season revenue strategy storms hit.

Closing day strategy infographic
Closing day is a strategy, not just a date.

Build Conditional Closing Criteria, Not Calendar Dates

Most resorts close by calendar, not conditions. Heavenly’s April pivot proves that date-driven closing decisions leave money on the table. Build internal thresholds now: how many inches triggers a reopening review? What’s your minimum staffing count? What’s your safety sign-off process? Document it in January so your team can execute in April without chaos.

The 48-Hour Communication Machine

Speed wins surprise reopenings. Resorts that execute these moments fast have three things ready: an email list segmented by pass type and distance, social templates pre-built for powder events, and a clear internal approval chain. Heavenly’s announcement almost certainly hit inboxes within hours of the storm — that’s infrastructure, not luck.

Closing day ops checklist
Use a checklist so the reopen-or-close decision is clear.

The Revenue Math Behind One More Weekend

A two-day late-season reopening at a destination resort can generate meaningful unplanned revenue across lift tickets, rentals, and F&B. Run the numbers: minimum staffing cost vs. expected ticket volume. If snowpack is safe and you can staff it, the margin usually works.

Ops Checklist for Surprise Reopenings

  • Snowpack assessed and hazard-cleared?
  • Minimum viable staffing available?
  • Ticketing system ready to go live?
  • Communication assets pre-built for deployment?
Closing day decision map
Decide with data, not guesswork.

The Takeaway

Heavenly’s late-season move wasn’t just a snow story — it was an operations story. Build your late-season decision framework now, before next year’s surprise storm. The resorts that execute fast when conditions change are the ones with the infrastructure built long before the weather did.

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: