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Grand Targhee actually gets more snow and significantly fewer people than its famed neighbor, Jackson Hole.
Grand Targhee actually gets more snow and significantly fewer people than its famed neighbor, Jackson Hole. (Photo: Courtesy Grand Targhee)

7 Ski Resorts that (Mostly) Guarantee Epic Powder

Planning a ski trip? Here鈥檚 where to score deep snow.

Published: 
Grand Targhee actually gets more snow and significantly fewer people than its famed neighbor, Jackson Hole.
(Photo: Courtesy Grand Targhee)

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OK,聽it鈥檚 actually impossible to guarantee powder on a ski trip you鈥檝e booked well in advance. The only way to do that is to keep one eye on the short-term 聽and purchase a last-minute ticket to wherever is going to get hit next. But even then, there are variables. Will the resort open good terrain? Will your flight be canceled due to the storm? Will the storm bring inches聽rather than the reported feet? Don鈥檛 fret. There are a few trusted places where the perfect powder day lines up more often than not.

Alta, Utah

(Courtesy Alta Ski Area/Christopher Whitaker Photography)

There鈥檚 a reason earned聽the top spot on聽, an independent site that grades ski resorts based on snowfall data and a custom algorithm to determine the best overall resorts. According to the site, 22 percent of ski days at Alta deliver more than six inches of new snow, and the resort gets a documented 521 inches of snow per year聽on average. Stay slopeside in Little Cottonwood Canyon鈥攚e like Alta鈥檚 (from $334)鈥攁nd if you鈥檙e lucky, you鈥檒l have the ski area to yourself when the access road closes from too much of the white stuff.

Turner Mountain, Montana

(Courtesy Turner Mountain)

Chances are you鈥檝e never heard of , located 23 miles north of the small Montana town of Libby. With just one double chairlift and around 800 acres, it鈥檚 not a huge ski area, but here鈥檚 what makes it worth a visit: Turner gets around 300 inches of snowfall per year, and it鈥檚 closed Monday through Thursday. Which means if you show up on a Friday morning after a storm, you鈥檒l have a week鈥檚 worth of waist-deep snow waiting for you. Oh, and lift tickets cost just $38. The Evergreen Motel isn鈥檛 fancy, but it鈥檚 been recently renovated and聽offers聽ski-and-stay packages and free breakfast (from $59).

Grand Targhee, Wyoming

(Courtesy Grand Targhee)

Located just over Teton Pass from Jackson Hole, actually gets more snow than its famed neighbor鈥攁round 500 inches on average, compared with 459 inches at Jackson Hole鈥攁nd significantly less people. It also offers plenty of ways to score powder even if it hasn鈥檛 dumped for a while. Bootpack out to Mary鈥檚 Nipple, an inbounds zone you can only reach on foot that holds snow well after a storm, book a day on the backside of the resort, or sign up for the mountain鈥檚 first tracks program to get on the lifts an hour before everyone else. Stay slopeside at (from $220), and you鈥檒l be set to snag first chair.

Silverton Mountain, Colorado

(Courtesy Silverton Mountain)

鈥檚 season is already off to a great start. Ski patrollers were scoring powder days in October, and the resort opened for heli-skiing in November. Plus, due to this throwback ski area鈥檚 single lift, minimal crowds, hike-to terrain, and high elevation (it tops out at 13,487 feet, the highest in the U.S.), it鈥檚 usually a good bet for finding powder. You鈥檒l need to ski with a guide during the peak of the season, but they know the best spots to find soft snow. The recently updated has 14 rooms and a live music venue in the basement (bunks from $40).

Alpental, Washington

(Courtesy Alpental)

When the Pacific Northwest is having a good winter, there鈥檚 nowhere better to be than , especially bright and early on a Tuesday morning during a storm cycle. Why Tuesday? Because Alpental, the closest ski area to Seattle,聽is closed on Mondays, which means storms have a full day to pile up without any tracks. And: this area gets, on average, 428 inches of snow per year. Stay in a brand new loft at (from $350), next door to the new DruBru brewery and Commonwealth restaurant.

Kirkwood, California

(Courtesy Tom Cohen/Vail Resorts)

locals call it the K-Factor.聽There鈥檚 something in the air at this ski area, located 35 miles south of Lake Tahoe, that translates into massive amounts of snow. Maybe it鈥檚 the resort鈥檚 position on the Pacific Crest, or the peak elevation of 9,800 feet, but Kirkwood scores an average of 354 inches of snow per year. After a storm, you鈥檒l find untracked powder in Sentinel Bowl and plenty of stashes in the trees off the Wall. The has condo-style rooms at the base of the mountain (from $155), or stay at the hip in South Lake Tahoe if you want to be closer to nightlife (from $98). Either way, don鈥檛 miss beers at the , at the end of the access road, after a powder day.

Whitewater, British Columbia

(Courtesy Whitewater/Sean Armstrong)

is perhaps best known for its food鈥攖he lodge鈥檚 famed Fresh Tracks Caf茅 serves up legitimately good聽home-cooked fare. But Whitewater is also known for its powder: about 480 inches of light, dry fluff each year and little in the way of lift lines. Ski inbounds glades in Enchanted Forest or off Glory Ridge; the backcountry access is also top-notch. There鈥檚 no lodging at the hill, so book a room in the charming town of Nelson, 25 minutes away, at a spot like the (from $125).

Lead Photo: Courtesy Grand Targhee

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