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British Columbia, Canada

Big White, Canada: Family Ski Guide

Ski-in/ski-out village, snow ghosts, night skiing, family perfected.

Family Score: 8.2/10
Ages 3-14
$$$ Premium

Last updated: April 2026

Big White

8.2/10

Canada

Big White

Book ski-in/ski-out accommodation in the village first, then buy passes online. If Big White's terrain is not enough for your advanced teens, Revelstoke is 2.5 hours north with serious vertical. If you want a bigger resort experience, Sun Peaks has more runs. Whistler has everything but costs twice as much.

$$$ Premium
Beste Zeit: February
Alter 3–14
You want genuine ski-in/ski-out where you literally walk out the door and click in — no shuttles, no parking lots, no drama
You want a charming mountain town with diverse dining, shopping, and nightlife — the purpose-built village is functional, not atmospheric
🌐

Dieser Reiseguide ist derzeit auf Englisch verfügbar. Wir arbeiten an der deutschen Version!

Ist Big White gut für Familien?

Kurz & knapp

Big White is Canada's best ski-in/ski-out family resort. The entire village is built around slope access: ski to your door, ski to ski school, ski to lunch. No car needed all week. Paired with reliable Okanagan champagne powder, a strong kids' program from age 18 months, and mid-range pricing, this is where BC families go before they graduate to Whistler. Better village than Silver Star, more snow than Sun Peaks.

CA$4,200CA$5,600

/week for family of 4

You want a charming mountain town with diverse dining, shopping, and nightlife — the purpose-built village is functional, not atmospheric

Biggest tradeoff

⛷️

Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?

72% Very beginner-friendly

Terrain Breakdown

18%54%28%Kid-friendly zone
BeginnerIntermediateAdvancedKid-friendly

Your 5-year-old will be pizza-wedging down Happy Valley on day one and linking turns by day three. Big White's beginner terrain is completely separated from the main mountain traffic, so your little one won't get intimidated by speeding teenagers. By the end of the week, expect them to be cruising blue runs and begging for "just one more."

The numbers tell the story: 2,765 skiable acres across 119 marked runs with 72% beginner and intermediate terrain. That means your family won't run out of new runs for a week. The 777m vertical drop from 2,319m summit down to 1,755m village gives everyone room to progress, while 750cm of annual Okanagan powder makes even wobbly pizza-wedgers look graceful.

Terrain breakdown that works for families:

  • 18% beginner, 54% intermediate, 22% advanced, 6% extreme
  • 16 lifts including high-speed gondola and five high-speed quads
  • 27 unnamed glades for tree skiing adventures
  • 38 acres of night skiing with 596m vertical (longest in North America)

Happy Valley is your home base with magic carpets and gentle slopes where beginners build confidence. Once your kid masters this protected zone, the progression to greens off the Bullet Express and Gem Lake Express lifts feels natural. The Ridge Rocket Express serves up wide, scenic blue cruisers that keep 10-year-olds entertained all week.

Big White's ski school gets kids progressing fast. Teach Your Tot takes ages 3-4 with parents alongside, while group lessons start at 4-5 in small, play-based classes. The Kids' Centre runs ability-grouped programs for ages 6-12, and Freeride Club offers multi-day progression camps for ages 6-14.

What makes the ski school special:

  • skiKrumb GPS trackers show exactly where your kid skied
  • Private lessons available from age 2+
  • Small class sizes with play-based instruction

Lunch happens slopeside without the village trek. Your crew can refuel and get back out quickly, maximizing ski time. The iconic "snow ghosts" (snow-caked fir trees) near the summit create magical runs that kids call skiing through a frozen forest.

Advanced options grow with your family:

  • TELUS Park terrain features from mini-jumps to advanced rails
  • Black Forest and Parachute Bowl tree skiing
  • Night skiing until 7:30pm extends your ski day

With this much variety and progression built in, Big White delivers serious value for families planning week-long stays.

📊The Numbers

MetricValue
Family Score
8.2Very good
Best Age Range
3–14 years
Kid-Friendly Terrain
72%Very beginner-friendly
Childcare Available
YesFrom 18 months
Ski School Min Age
3 years
Kids Ski Free
Under 5
Magic Carpet
Yes
Kids Terrain Park
Yes
Local Terrain
105 km / 119 runs

Score Breakdown

Value for Money

8.5

Convenience

9.0

Things to Do

7.0

Parent Experience

7.5

Childcare & Learning

9.0

Planning Your Trip

🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?

If you book one place at Big White, make it Stonebridge Lodge or Sundance Resort. You'll have two bedrooms, a full kitchen for those inevitable 6pm pasta nights, and you're truly ski-in/ski-out - which means no dragging gear across parking lots when someone inevitably forgets their goggles.

Here's what makes Big White different from most North American ski resorts: 80% of the accommodation is ski-in/ski-out. Not "ski-adjacent." Not "short shuttle ride." You walk out your door, click in, and go. With kids, this is everything.

Location affects your morning routine more than you think. The Village Centre puts you steps from restaurants, shops, ski school check-in, and the gondola - perfect when you need to grab forgotten snacks or hit the rental shop. Happy Valley is the family hub with the beginner area, adventure park, and day lodge. Slightly quieter, slightly more space, equally convenient for families with younger kids.

Your Options by Budget

Budget (CA$150–250/night): Studio and one-bedroom condos in buildings like Whitefoot Lodge and Chateau Big White. Basic but clean, with kitchenettes for making pasta at 6pm when nobody wants to get dressed again. Most have hot tubs in the building.

Mid-range (CA$250–450/night): Two-bedroom condos at Stonebridge Lodge or Sundance Resort are the family sweet spot. Full kitchens, in-suite laundry, private hot tubs, and Sundance has a heated pool, games room, and movie theatre that teenagers actually want to use.

  • Book by September for Christmas and spring break
  • Sundance's amenities keep kids entertained on storm days
  • In-suite laundry saves you from packing seven days of snow clothes

Luxury (CA$450–800/night): Large townhomes and chalets in Eagles Resort or Copper Kettle Lodge give multi-family groups room to spread out. Four bedrooms, full kitchens, garages for gear, and the kind of space where cousins can chase each other without anyone losing it. Some properties sleep 10+, which makes the per-family math surprisingly reasonable.

Once you've locked down accommodation, the drive up the mountain becomes your next consideration - and it's worth planning ahead for those winter road conditions.


🎟️

Was kosten die Liftpässe?

Lift Tickets

Your lift ticket budget here feels like a victory after researching Whistler or Banff prices. A full day at Big White costs what you'd pay for a half-day lesson at those destination resorts. Big White keeps pricing refreshingly straightforward with no dynamic pricing games, just buy online at least 7 days ahead for the best rates.

Online day passes (weekday / weekend):

  • Adult (19-64): CA$121 / CA$141
  • Youth (13-18) & Senior (65+): CA$101 / CA$121
  • Child (6-12): CA$81 / CA$101
  • Tot (5 & under): Free (pick up at ticket office)

Window prices run 20-30% higher, CA$154 adult weekday, CA$179 weekend. Don't do this to yourself when you're already juggling gear rentals and snacks. Buy online and save that extra money for hot chocolate.

The POWder Card makes multi-day trips much more reasonable. A 3-day adult runs around CA$372 (CA$124/day vs CA$141 single-day weekend), and flexible passes mean you're not locked into consecutive days if someone gets sick or needs a rest.

Smart family moves include the beginner lift ticket at CA$29 for Plaza Chair and magic carpets only. Perfect for first-timers who aren't ready for the full mountain without the full-mountain price tag. Night skiing runs CA$30 adult / CA$22.50 youth-child online for Western Canada's largest night skiing area with 596m of vertical.

Big White participates in the Indy Pass but skips Ikon and Epic networks, which actually works in your favor with fewer destination crowds and shorter lift lines. Season passes start around CA$899 for adults with significant early-bird discounts. Kids 5 and under ski free, so if you've got toddlers, free lift tickets plus the CA$29 beginner pass means easing them into skiing without financial pressure. Now about those slope-side accommodations that make this all so convenient...


Planning Your Trip

✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Big White?

If you're dreading a complicated mountain journey with tired kids, Big White delivers the opposite. Fly into Kelowna International Airport (YLW) and you're roughly 55 minutes from clicking into your bindings. One highway, one turn, minimal stress.

Direct flights run from Vancouver (1 hour), Calgary (1.5 hours), Toronto, and Edmonton during ski season. Most families land, grab a rental car, and are unpacking at the village before the kids have finished their screen time. The small airport means no terminal marathons or baggage claim chaos.

The drive from Kelowna follows Highway 33 east through rolling Okanagan hills, then climbs through forest for the final stretch. The road is well-maintained but can get snowy, winter tires are required in BC from October through April. Pro tip: Big White Shuttle runs daily transfers from the airport for around CA$55 per adult (kids under 5 free) if you want to skip the rental car stress entirely.

Distance Reality Check

  • Vancouver: 5-hour drive via Coquihalla Highway or quick flight to Kelowna
  • Calgary: 6 hours through the Rockies (flight to YLW is smarter with kids)
  • Seattle: 7 hours by car or short hop to Kelowna

Book shuttle transfers in advance during peak weeks. Honestly, the Kelowna route beats every other BC mountain for family travel simplicity. You'll be settling into your ski-in accommodation while other families are still navigating Vancouver traffic, which means more energy for exploring the village shops and restaurants that first evening.


Was gibt's abseits der Piste?

By 4pm, your crew will be dragging their boots and announcing they're "done skiing forever" (until tomorrow). But here's the thing about Big White's evening scene - it's compact, walkable, and designed around families like yours. No need for a car once you're in the village, which means no wrestling kids into car seats when everyone's already tired.

The TELUS Tube Park at Happy Valley will be the story your kid tells at school Monday morning. Dedicated tubing lanes with a carpet lift back up, and kids can handle it solo from age 3+. The squealing echoes through the village, so you'll hear the fun before you see it. During peak weeks, book ahead because it sells out fast.

  • Tickets: CA$20-30 per session
  • Age 3+ can tube independently
  • Carpet lift eliminates the uphill trudge
  • Book ahead during holidays and peak weeks

Happy Valley Adventure Park saves the day when someone declares they're "done skiing" at 2pm. Free ice skating on the outdoor rink (included with accommodation), plus mini snowmobiles for kids and horse-drawn sleigh rides through the village at CA$25 per person. Dog sled tours round out the winter wonderland experience.

For older kids (6+) who can handle a hike, the snow ghost tours offer guided snowshoe adventures through the mystical snow ghost forest near the summit. Evening headlamp tours add extra magic, though twilight timing works better for most families' energy levels.

Village dining covers 18+ restaurants and cafes, with real family-friendly options. Underground Pizza hits the sweet spot - casual, fast, and kids really love it. The Woods offers a Little Munchkins menu for CA$12 that includes drink and dessert. The Bullwheel does solid pub fare when you need something hearty.

  • Underground Pizza: Family go-to, casual and quick
  • The Woods: Little Munchkins menu CA$12 with drink and dessert
  • The Bullwheel: Pub fare and comfort food
  • 6 Degrees Bistro: Date night spot with Okanagan wines

Saturday night events bring out Big White's community spirit with carnival nights featuring fireworks, bingo, and appearances by Loose Moose, the resort mascot. Kids absolutely love these evenings - it's the kind of wholesome entertainment that bigger resorts have lost in their rush to be sophisticated.

Snowshoe Sam's earned the title of Canada's #1 ski bar and hosts live music most nights. For groceries, the small village market covers basics, but stock up in Kelowna on your way in since this isn't a full supermarket. The Spa at Stonebridge offers massages and hot stone treatments with mountain views - perfect for parents who need a reset while kids are in ski school.

When to Go

Season at a glance — color-coded by family score

Best: February
Season Arc — Family Scores by MonthA semicircular visualization showing ski season months color-coded by family recommendation score.JanFebMarAprNovDecJFMANDGreat for familiesGoodFairNo data

💬Was sagen andere Eltern?

Parents consistently describe Big White as "the most stress-free ski week we've ever had with kids" - and when you dig into why, it comes down to one thing: everything just works. The ski-in/ski-out village eliminates the daily gear hauling nightmare that makes other ski trips feel like military operations.

What families love most:

  • Walk out your door and ski - no parking lots, shuttle buses, or frozen gear transfers
  • Value that doesn't make you wince: similar snow quality to Whistler, lower prices, fewer crowds
  • Kids' programs that actually work - GPS tracking for peace of mind and instructors who really connect with children
  • Night skiing that keeps older kids engaged when they'd be bored elsewhere

The honest concerns parents share:

  • Compact village means you'll eat at the same restaurants twice during a week-long stay
  • High elevation brings fog and cold snaps that reduce visibility on upper mountain - "you're skiing trees by feel"
  • Remote location with no charming mountain town escape (Kelowna is an hour away)
  • Purpose-built village "lacks the charm" of traditional mountain communities
  • On-mountain market covers basics but forget something important and you're stuck

The parent consensus: Big White delivers one of the best family value propositions in western Canada. It won't win architecture awards or Instagram prettiness contests, but for a week of actual skiing where everyone's happy, logistics don't stress you out, and you don't need to sell a kidney for lift tickets - it's hard to beat.

Common Questions

Everything families ask about this resort

Excellent. Happy Valley is a dedicated beginner area with magic carpets and gentle slopes separated from faster traffic. The Plaza Chair serves wide, mellow greens, and the progression to longer runs off the Bullet Express is natural and confidence-building. 72% of the mountain is green or blue terrain, so kids won't outgrow it in a week. Group lessons start at age 4, and the play-based instruction approach keeps little ones engaged.

Tot Town takes children from 18 months to 5 years old. Half-day sessions (8:30am-11:30am or 1:00pm-4:00pm) run CA$105 at the window or CA$94.50 booked online. Full day (8:30am-4:00pm) is CA$183 or CA$165 online. Daycare Plus (CA$210) includes a 1-hour private or 2-hour group lesson. Lunch and snacks are provided, and the facility is 100% nut-free. Note: BC licensing limits attendance to 40 hours per 30-day period.

A family of four (two adults, two kids 6-12) pays CA$404 for weekday lift tickets online or CA$484 on weekends. Add a group ski lesson for one child (~CA$100), lunch on the mountain (~CA$60-80 for four), and you're looking at CA$565-665 before lodging. Multi-day POWder Cards drop the per-day lift cost significantly. Kids 5 and under ski free — just pick up a complimentary pass at the ticket office.

Mid-January through mid-February offers the deepest snow and most reliable conditions, with the snow ghost trees at their most spectacular. Late February and March bring warmer temperatures and longer days — easier on young kids and softer snow that's more forgiving for learners. Avoid Christmas week and BC Family Day (mid-February) if you want shorter lift lines. Early December and late March offer the best deals but less reliable snow coverage on lower runs.

Yes, and it's not marketing spin. About 80% of Big White's accommodation is genuine ski-in/ski-out — you walk out the door, click into bindings, and ski to the lifts. No shuttle buses, no parking lots, no hauling gear across frozen asphalt. This is the single biggest advantage over most North American ski resorts for families. The village is also car-free once you're parked, so young kids can walk around safely.

Big White has western Canada's largest night skiing area — 38 acres with a 596m vertical drop, the longest lit vertical in North America. This is a genuine evening ski experience, not a token floodlit bunny hill. Runs operate until 7:30pm on select evenings (typically Thursday through Saturday). Night passes are CA$30 adult / CA$22.50 for youth and children. Kids absolutely love it, and it effectively extends your ski day by several hours.

Book Big White ski school at least 3-4 weeks ahead for holiday periods, especially Christmas and Family Day weekend. The GPS tracking program fills up fast because parents love being able to check their kid's location on the mountain via smartphone. Regular weekends usually have availability with 1-2 weeks notice.

Big White has multiple rental shops right in the village, including Ski Tak Hut and Sports Traders, so you can literally walk from your accommodation to get fitted. Kids' equipment is well-maintained and they'll adjust or swap anything that doesn't work. For a week-long trip, renting locally saves the airline hassle and gives you backup if something breaks.

Non-skiers can snowshoe the village trails, use the outdoor heated pools at White Crystal Inn, or take the gondola up for mountain views and lunch at Summit Cafe. The TELUS Tube Park operates during the day, and the village is compact enough for coffee shop hopping between Starbucks and local spots without needing a car.

Big White wins for families with kids under 8 because of the true ski-in/ski-out setup and better snow reliability. Silver Star has more village charm and cheaper lodging, but you'll spend time on shuttles and dealing with parking. Big White's Tot Town daycare also starts at 18 months versus Silver Star's 3-year minimum.

Have a question we didn't cover? We'd love to add it to our guide.

Unser Fazit

Würden wir Big White empfehlen?

Was es wirklich kostet

Mid-range for BC: cheaper than Whistler by about 30%, comparable to Sun Peaks. The ski-in/ski-out village means no car rental, no parking fees, no daily shuttle logistics, which saves more than the sticker price suggests. Smartest money move: book a condo with a kitchen, buy groceries at the Kelowna Costco on the way in, and cook half your meals.

Worauf ihr achten müsst

Flat light and fog are frequent. The Okanagan interior gets socked in, and visibility can be poor for days. If your family struggles in flat light, the tree skiing helps but it is still a challenge. The village is also purpose-built and can feel a bit generic compared to historic mountain towns. If character matters, Fernie or Revelstoke have it.

If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Silver Star for a similar ski-in/ski-out village with shorter drive times from Kelowna.

Würden wir Big White empfehlen?

Book ski-in/ski-out accommodation in the village first, then buy passes online. If Big White's terrain is not enough for your advanced teens, Revelstoke is 2.5 hours north with serious vertical. If you want a bigger resort experience, Sun Peaks has more runs. Whistler has everything but costs twice as much.