Kimberley, Canada: Family Ski Guide
BC's top-rated family resort. $90 kids' lift ticket. Nobody's heard of it.
Last updated: March 2026

Canada
Kimberley
Book in Kimberley town, buy day passes, and enjoy the absence of crowds. If Kimberley is too small after two days, Fernie is 3 hours east with bigger terrain and more snow. If you want ski-in/ski-out, Big White has that. For a similar low-key Rockies experience, Panorama is nearby.
Dieser Reiseguide ist derzeit auf Englisch verfügbar. Wir arbeiten an der deutschen Version!
Ist Kimberley gut für Familien?
Kimberley is BC's most underrated family mountain. A former mining town with real character, sunny Rockies weather, and a small resort that gets you from parking lot to chairlift in minutes. Less snow than Fernie but more sunshine. The kids' area is good, the town has a Bavarian-themed pedestrian plaza, and you will almost never wait in a lift line. If Big White is too crowded, Kimberley is the quiet alternative.
It is a 4-hour drive from Calgary over mountain passes with no nearby commercial airport, making it genuinely inconvenient for fly-in families.
Biggest tradeoff
💬Was sagen andere Eltern?
FAMILY TYPE CARDS
First-Timers: Ideal. Tiger Private Lessons from age 3, dedicated beginner area at the base, bundled TELUS packages that simplify everything. The drive is your only real obstacle. If you can get here, this is one of the best places in BC to start.
Annual Families: Good fit. Multi-week programmes build coaching relationships across the season. Quiet slopes let you actually ski alongside your kids. Advanced skiers may want a Fernie day trip by mid-week.
Mixed-Ability: Good fit. On-site childcare handles the toddler. Uncrowded base area makes regrouping easy. The terrain range, 4,035 to 6,503 feet, serves beginners through solid intermediates without anyone feeling stranded.
Budget-Watchers: Ideal. C$90 child day passes, self-catering rentals from C$130/night, and night skiing for bonus sessions. Pre-purchase adult tickets online to offset the C$224 window rate.
Families on the Slopes
(16 photos)Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.
📊The Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Family Score | 7.2Good |
Best Age Range | 3–12 years |
Kid-Friendly Terrain | — |
Childcare Available | Yes |
Ski School Min Age | — |
Kids Ski Free | — |
Local Terrain | 94 runs |
Score Breakdown
Value for Money
Convenience
Things to Do
Parent Experience
Childcare & Learning
Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?
The Owl Beginner Area sits at the mountain base, which matters more than it sounds. Your five-year-old's first-ever ski experience happens at the bottom of the hill, steps from the lodge, not after a gondola ride they didn't ask for. A magic carpet, the flat conveyor belt that eliminates the terrifying first chairlift, feeds into gentle, separated terrain where the only other skiers are also figuring out how to snowplow.
This is where the TELUS Learn to Ski/Board packages start. For children aged 5-12, the 3-day bundle wraps lesson, magic carpet access, Owl Beginner Area lift ticket, and equipment rental into a single transaction. You book once. You show up. Your kid gets a maximum 8:1 group ratio with an instructor who stays with the same group across the sessions. The 48-hour advance booking requirement isn't bureaucracy, it's how the resort keeps groups small enough that your child actually gets attention.
For the truly young, Tiger Private Lessons take children from age 3 in 1:1 sessions starting at 45 minutes. That duration is deliberate. A three-year-old on snow for the first time has 40 minutes of genuine engagement before cold, fatigue, or distraction wins. Kimberley doesn't pretend otherwise. You're not paying for a two-hour lesson your toddler abandons after thirty minutes.
The progression path is visible from the base: magic carpet → Owl greens → lower blues accessed by the Easter chair → eventually, the full mountain. Kids who outgrow the beginner area don't need to relocate to a different part of the resort. They simply move uphill.
For older children ready for more structure, Mountain Special Forces runs weekend camps for ages 9-12 with 4.5 hours of daily instruction split between morning (10:00-12:30) and afternoon (1:30-3:30) blocks. The maximum 8:1 ratio holds here too, and the programme is explicitly built around friendship-building, kids ski with the same group across weekends, developing both technique and social bonds. For families staying multiple weekends or the full season, the 8-week multi-week programme (ages 4-6 starting January 10/11, C$779 excluding lift ticket) creates genuine coaching continuity that drop-in lessons can't match.
One flag from parent reviews: a report on Freeride.com describes two 9-year-olds being moved from Level 2 to Level 3 without parental consent, taken up the full mountain with 9 children and one instructor, and returned 45 minutes late at pick-up. We found no resort response to this review. It's a single incident, but it's worth knowing, ask the ski school directly about their level-change communication policy when you book. The phone number is 250-432-0315.
During Spring Break, full-day KIDZ camps expand to cover ages 3-17 with supervised lunch included, genuine full-day childcare that frees parents to ski together without clock-watching.

Trail Map
Partial DataTerrain by Difficulty
© OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL
Planning Your Trip
🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?
Kimberley splits its accommodation between two zones: the mountain base and the Platzl townsite, five minutes down the road. Your choice determines your morning routine.
On-mountain, ski-in/ski-out lodging is the obvious play for families. Western Lodge is the named property bookable through package operators like Snowpak (rated 3.5/5), offering bundled lift-and-lodging deals with full refund policies. Beyond the lodge, VRBO lists 65-plus ski-in/ski-out vacation rentals in the Kimberley area. Budget units start around C$130/night; mid-tier properties with more space run approximately C$182/night. A two-bedroom rental with a kitchen eliminates restaurant breakfast costs and gives you a base for packing trail lunches, a meaningful daily saving over five or six days.
The alternative is staying in Kimberley's townsite near the Platzl. You'll pay less and get a pedestrian village with restaurants, shops, and actual local life outside your window. The tradeoff is a five-minute drive to the base each morning, manageable in a rental car, less so if you're relying on someone else's shuttle schedule.
For first-timers and budget families: a slopeside VRBO rental at the C$130 tier keeps mornings simple and costs down. For families wanting evening atmosphere beyond the lodge, the Platzl townsite delivers something the mountain base doesn't.
Was kosten die Liftpässe?
The single most effective cost lever at Kimberley is pre-purchasing lift tickets online. The resort explicitly states that earlier purchases yield larger savings, don't buy at the window. We don't have confirmed discount percentages, but at C$224 per adult day, even a 15% online reduction saves you over C$30 per person per day.
For first-timer families, the TELUS Learn to Ski/Board 3-day package is the move. It bundles lesson, rental, magic carpet, and Owl Beginner Area access into one purchase, cheaper than buying each component separately and eliminates the rental-shop queue on day one.
Half-day tickets are available from 12:15pm for resort purchase only (subject to availability). If your family's rhythm is mornings on the mountain and afternoons in town, this cuts your lift cost roughly in half for those days.
Night skiing runs Thursday, Friday, and Saturday from 5:30-8:30pm until March 7. Pricing isn't confirmed in our data, but night sessions at comparable BC resorts typically run 40-60% less than full-day tickets. Three hours of evening skiing with your kids under lights, after a slower-paced afternoon, is one of the cheapest ways to add a session to your week.
The multi-week programmes break differently: eight weekend sessions at C$779 (ages 4-6, excluding lift) works out to roughly C$97 per coached day. Regional families within driving distance who commit to the full block get coaching continuity at a per-session rate that single-day lessons can't touch.
Cook breakfast. Pack lunches. Ski until 3pm. That formula alone saves a family of four C$60-80 daily over eating at the mountain.
Available Passes
Planning Your Trip
☕Was gibt's abseits der Piste?
At 3:30pm, the Platzl pedestrian zone in downtown Kimberley is doing something most purpose-built ski villages cannot: being a real town. The Bavarian-themed streetscape, timber facades, pedestrian-only walkways, dates to the 1970s, when Kimberley reinvented itself after the Sullivan Mine, once one of the world's largest lead-zinc operations, began its long decline. The town leaned into its German immigrant heritage as a survival strategy. What remains isn't theme-park kitsch. It's a community that chose an identity and committed to it for fifty years.
Your kids won't know or care about mining history. They'll care that there are shops to wander, hot chocolate to drink, and space to run that doesn't involve ski boots. The Platzl functions as the family decompression zone Kimberley's mountain base lacks, a place to shift gears between skiing and dinner without retreating to your rental.
We don't have verified data on specific restaurant names or meal pricing in the townsite. What multiple sources describe is a handful of casual dining options with a "Canadian family vibe", think pizza and pub food rather than fondue and white tablecloths. For families self-catering most meals, one or two evenings out in the Platzl keeps the trip feeling like a holiday rather than a logistics exercise.
The five-minute drive between mountain and town is the only friction. It's not walkable. Budget for a rental car.

When to Go
Season at a glance — color-coded by family score
✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Kimberley?
Drive. That's the honest answer. Kimberley sits in BC's East Kootenay region, roughly four hours southwest of Calgary via the Trans-Canada and Highway 95. The route crosses mountain passes, Kicking Horse Pass through the Rockies, then south through the Columbia Valley. In January and February, this means winter tires (legally required in BC), potential chain requirements, and the kind of conditions that make white-knuckle drivers reconsider their plans.
Cranbrook's Canadian Rockies International Airport (YXC) is 30 minutes from Kimberley, but scheduled commercial service is limited and we don't have confirmed direct flights from major hubs during ski season. Check current routes before building a trip around flying in.
For Calgary-based families, the four-hour drive is a known quantity, long but doable, especially with an overnight stop in Invermere or Radium Hot Springs to break the journey and give kids a soak. For families flying into Calgary from farther afield, you're looking at a flight plus a half-day drive, which is a big ask with young children.
The upside of inconvenience: it's exactly why the slopes are quiet. Every family that decides Kimberley is too far away is one less family in the lift line ahead of you.
Snow phone for conditions before you depart: 800-258-7669. Reservations: 800-282-1200.

Common Questions
Everything families ask about this resort
Have a question we didn't cover? We'd love to add it to our guide.
Unser Fazit
Würden wir Kimberley empfehlen?
Was es wirklich kostet
Among the cheapest lift tickets in BC. Town accommodation and dining are mining-town prices, not resort markup. A family of four skis and eats here for roughly what two adults pay at Whistler. Smartest money move: combine 3 days at Kimberley with 2 days at Fernie or Panorama for a multi-resort Rockies road trip at a fraction of Whistler pricing.
Worauf ihr achten müsst
Small ski area. Experts will be done by noon. Less snowfall than the Columbia Valley resorts means conditions can be variable. The town's Bavarian theme is charming or kitschy depending on your tolerance. If your family needs more than three days of skiing, you will need a second mountain. Fernie or Panorama are the obvious add-ons.
If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Big White for more terrain and a proper ski-in/ski-out village.
Würden wir Kimberley empfehlen?
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