Mountains are like ski boots鈥攊t's all about fit. Whether you're hunting bottomless powder or family fun, we've done the homework for you. All that's left to do is decide what makes your perfect winter vacation, and take your pick.
Learn the New Rules of Skiing
Forget what you know about ski lessons, ski-town parties, and early-morning runs. Then go have more fun.听
Convenience Is King

Within an hour or two after hitting the tarmac at Salt Lake City Airport, you can be soaring up 鈥檚 tram and scouting lines at this famously deep (500 inches annually) resort. Stay slopeside in one of four lodges鈥攚e like the outdoor hot tubs and top-floor sushi at the concrete-bunker-style (from $214). If the canyon road is closed due to a storm鈥攁 frequent occurrence鈥攜ou鈥檒l beat the crowds to powder-day hot spots like the long, sustained vertical off the Gad 2 chair, now easier to access with last winter鈥檚 upgrade to a high-speed quad. In Colorado, combines terrain for all abilities with a relatively short drive from Denver International Airport (two hours west via Interstate 70), and the Wi-Fi-enabled will deliver you door-to-door (from $66). Peak 6 opened last winter, expanding the resort鈥檚 high-alpine runs by more than 20 percent. Stay in one of Breck鈥檚 partner lodges, like (from $479). Back east, New Hampshire鈥檚 family-friendly is only about two hours from Boston and features everything from steep glades to award-winning terrain parks. The resort invested $250,000 in snowmaking this winter, so you鈥檒l be able to tackle the bumps on True Grit or the narrow, tree-filled lines on Psycho Glades no matter the forecast. And don鈥檛 forget New England Patriots Tuesdays, when lift-ticket prices are based on how many points the opposing team scored in that week鈥檚 game ($7 is common).
Powder Is Your Religion

鲍迟补丑鈥檚 gets a reliable 551 inches of snow each winter, lodging is charming and family friendly, and slow double chairs only add to its throwback appeal. On a powder day, wait for the rope drop at the High Traverse, then hold on for the bumpy sidestep to the Backside鈥攖he waist-deep snow will be worth it. For intermediates, this year the Corkscrew run off the Collins lift has been widened to make it easier to descend. Crash on a dorm-room bunk at the endearingly shabby , which includes communal meals ($119), or in a more private, bathrobe-equipped suite at the ($500). At , Washington, last February鈥檚 Powmageddon brought 66 inches of snow in four days. Shortly after, a controlled avalanche took out the upper mountain鈥檚 Chair 6. Now it鈥檚 been replaced with a fixed-grip chair that can sustain burlier weather. Our advice: boot-pack up 7,012-foot Silver King for fresh tracks, then brag about it over nachos at the Snorting Elk Cellar. For East Coasters, , Vermont, gets more natural snowfall (375 inches) than the rest of the Green Mountain resorts. The , which opened last winter, has the best deals on the mountain (packages from $149).
You Like to Head Out the Gate

颁补濒颈蹿辞谤苍颈补鈥檚 gets the most snow in the north Tahoe region (an average of 500 inches annually) and has an open-boundary policy, free uphill skinning access, and a that offers professionally guided tours onto Donner Pass, a high-alpine zone with thousands of acres of rolling backcountry terrain (from $199, including gear rental). 国产吃瓜黑料 Salt Lake City, Big Cottonwood Canyon鈥檚 was recently purchased by nearby Deer Valley, but not much has changed. It still gets the same light and dry 500-plus inches per year, and you鈥檒l still find fewer crowds than at neighboring Alta and Snowbird. Book a room at the slopeside and you鈥檒l have the ski area鈥檚 1,200 acres practically to yourself. If that鈥檚 not enough, sign up for the Back Tracks program and let ski patrol sniff out the goods for you (from $75).
You Like to Whoop It Up, Too

At , British Columbia, you can have it all: 8,171 skiable acres spread across three gigantic glaciers, capped off with a village where you can saber a champagne bottle in 鈥檚 underground wine cellar or drink local Kokanee beer at Merlin鈥檚 while a DJ spins until the wee hours. For the best deal, book a ski-and-stay package with lodging options around (from $96). Since most Colorado visitors are lured by resorts closer to Denver, make the trek to , where the resort鈥檚 four mountains provide open bowls, flowing groomers, and steep glades. The restaurant scene is just as eclectic, from the flown-in-daily sushi at Kenichi to the tastiest coq au vin this side of Paris at Brexi Brasserie. Our go-to is Jimmy鈥檚 Bodega, a raw bar known for its mezcal that opened this summer. , California, feels remote鈥攊t鈥檚 300 miles north of Los Angeles in the eastern Sierra Nevada, with broad swathes of above-tree-line slopes. This year it鈥檚 easier to get to with direct flights from Las Vegas and Denver. And the vibe is surprisingly lively, with a world-class terrain park and a SoCal-inspired music and food scene that never slows down. Opt for wood-fired pizza at Campo, or the expanded Mammoth Brewing Company, which will serve pub fare starting this winter. For the best lift-ticket deals: Whistler, Aspen, and Mammoth are all part of the Mountain Collective Pass, which gives you two days at each resort and more.
The Bigger the Playground, the Better

The runs are long (up to six miles) and the lifts are high (the Lone Peak Tram whisks you to 11,166 feet) at , Montana. Since acquiring neighboring Moonlight Basin, the area now boasts 5,800 skiable acres鈥攖he most in the U.S.鈥攑lus new glading that will open additional in-bounds terrain. It鈥檚 also more accessible than ever, with numerous flights into Bozeman (an hour away), including 14 nonstop routes from places like Seattle and Houston. If you like expansive, you鈥檒l love , British Columbia, which runs cat- and heli-accessed operations right from the base. This year, the resort will debut an avalanche bombing system in the North Bowl, which means patrol can open it up faster on powder days. Stay in a suite near the gondola at the (from $199), and after shredding head to the Rockford Wok Bar and Grill for honey-ginger chicken wings and pints of local IPA. Finally, there鈥檚 big news down in , New Mexico. A lift will now access 12,481-foot Kachina Peak, a trip that previously required a 45-minute boot-pack, increasing the area鈥檚 lift-served terrain by a whopping 50 percent. Taos鈥檚 base area will also get a face-lift for next winter. Until then, our favorite remains the European-style , an apr猫s go-to since 1960 at the base of Chair 1 (from $2,724 for one week, all-inclusive).
The Finer Things Matter

With ski butlers, no lift lines, and an artisanal cheese-making facility, you get what feels like your own exclusive resort at , Utah. Five new snowcats will make the resort鈥檚 already buffed-out groomers that much more fun. Stay at a ski-in, ski-out condo at (from $555) and a fleet of Cadillacs will chauffeur you around nearby Park City. Recently mild winters in Vermont haven鈥檛 affected as much as elsewhere, thanks to a $10 million snowmaking expansion. This year the resort also gets a brand-new quad chair at the base of Spruce Peak, which will deliver intermediates to low-angle trees, and the Spruce Camp base lodge, where you can sip a cappuccino by the fire while chefs whip up custom meals with ingredients sourced from local farms.
Challenging Terrain Is Mandatory

At , Colorado, the infamous North Face鈥攚ith cliff-strewn runs like Cesspool and Sock It to Me鈥攊s the site of one of the country鈥檚 first big-mountain competitions. The resort recently cleared more than ten acres of trees for gladed skiing in the mellower East River area, perfect for rising intermediates. Bonus: since Crested Butte is four-plus hours from Denver, the crowds steer clear. Last winter, , Wyoming, got 500 inches of snow, the fourth-deepest snowpack in its 48-year history. From the top of the tram, you can access 4,139 vertical feet of ski-movie-worthy steeps, or go with a private guide into Teton backcountry. After, reward yourself with a margarita and buffalo-gravy fries at the Spur bar in the base village鈥檚 (from $280). In California, 鈥檚 abundance of pucker-inducing terrain鈥攍ike the cliffy shots off Headwall and the chutes off Palisades, which have entrances as steep as elevator shafts鈥攁re why pro skiers like Julia Mancuso and Cody Townsend call it home. This spring, Squaw will kick its apr猫s scene up a notch by hosting concerts all over the mountain, including the top of the famous KT-22 chair. Your lift ticket to Squaw also works at neighboring , which has tons of backcountry access and steeps that remain empty, thanks to short sidesteps. Stay at the low-key (from $265), then take the free shuttle over to Alpine for the day.
Family Is the Focus

At , Vermont, kids ages three and up can learn to snowboard through the resort鈥檚 (rental and lift ticket, $80), which offers special mini boards and a pint-size park. The whole family will be entertained with Mount Snow鈥檚 jam-packed event schedule, which includes everything from a duct-tape derby, where participants race homemade cardboard sleds, to a St. Patrick鈥檚 Day hunt for a pot of gold, where the winner gets a season pass. , Colorado, has terrain for everyone, and now there鈥檚 an easier way to find it: the resort鈥檚 Sherpa app provides location-based tips on where to ski, a patrol help button, and early access to deals and news. Not that the kids will want to leave the 2,400-square-foot , where they can learn freestyle tricks on indoor trampolines and foam pits (lessons from $209).