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California, United States

Big Bear Mountain, United States: Family Ski Guide

Three mountains, one ticket, two hours from your driveway.

Family Score: 6/10
Ages 3-12

Last updated: April 2026

Big Bear Mountain - official image
β˜… 6/10 Family Score
6/10

United States

Big Bear Mountain

Big Bear Mountain is the right call for SoCal families who want their kids' first snow experience without the commitment of a destination trip. The three-mountain system, Bear Mountain, Snow Summit, and Snow Valley, gives room to grow across multiple visits, and the beginner infrastructure at Bear Mountain is built for total novices. Skip this if you need reliable natural snow, on-site childcare for toddlers, or anything approaching advanced terrain. Smartest next move: Book lift tickets and lessons online well in advance, ticket window prices run higher, and weekend lesson slots fill fast. Check bigbearmountainresort.com for current variable pricing before committing to a date.

Best: January
Ages 3-12
Your kids have never seen snow and you live within 3 hours of LA or San Diego
You need nursery or daycare β€” no on-site childcare offered at any mountain

Is Big Bear Mountain Good for Families?

The Quick Take

If Mammoth Mountain is Southern California's serious ski destination, Big Bear Mountain is its accessible one, two hours from Los Angeles instead of five, with the region's largest beginner learning area and a single lift ticket covering three separate mountains connected by free shuttle. The catch: snow here is manufactured, not guaranteed, and there's no childcare for kids under 4. For a first family snow day within day-trip range of LA, nothing in SoCal competes.

You need nursery or daycare β€” no on-site childcare offered at any mountain

Biggest tradeoff

⛷️

What’s the Skiing Like for Families?

Bear Mountain is about as close to easy-mode learning as Southern California gets. The resort holds the region's largest dedicated beginner area by acreage, with two Magic Carpet conveyor lifts that move small children uphill without the anxiety of a chairlift. For a five-year-old who's never seen snow, the progression from flat ground to gentle slope happens without drama.

  • First carpet: Two Magic Carpets at Bear Mountain's base area let kids practice gliding on flat-to-gentle terrain before ever approaching a chair. This is where the first 30 minutes happen, and it matters.
  • First green: Bear Mountain's beginner zone feeds into wide, groomed greens with consistent pitch, no surprise steeps or intersections with faster traffic.
  • First lesson: Group lessons start at age 5; private instruction takes kids as young as 4. Each of the three mountains runs its own Adventure Academy, so you can match the learning environment to the child.
  • First park: The Skill Builder Park at Bear Mountain offers scaled-down versions of professional freestyle features, small rollers, mini-boxes, gentle berms, so kids can try terrain park riding without full-sized consequences. Nothing else in SoCal provides this kind of graduated park entry.
  • Structured progression: The Valley SoCal Youth Program at Snow Valley costs $299-$419 for six group lessons with night-session lift tickets (3 PM–8:30 PM) and optional rentals, ages 8-12. For families committing to multiple visits in a season, this undercuts buying lessons individually by a wide margin.
  • Competitive track: Team Bear is a season-long freestyle program at Bear Mountain for ages 6-17, requiring application and feeding into national-level competition. If your kid gets hooked on park riding, this is where recreational interest turns into structured development.
  • The friction point: No childcare exists at any of the three mountains. If your youngest is under 4 and not in a private lesson, one parent is sitting out. Plan for this, there's no workaround.

Children 12 and under are required to wear helmets on-slope. Helmets come included when you bundle rentals with lessons; otherwise they cost $10 online or $20 at the ticket window.

Bear Mountain also runs a daily adaptive ski program with advance reservation required. Snow Valley's adaptive program operates at limited capacity, book early if this applies to your family.

πŸ“ŠThe Numbers

MetricValue
Family Score
6Average
Best Age Range
3–12 years
Kid-Friendly Terrain
β€”
Ski School Min Age
β€”
Kids Ski Free
β€”
Magic Carpet
Yes
Kids Terrain Park
Yes

Score Breakdown

Value for Money

7.5

Convenience

6.5

Things to Do

4.5

Parent Experience

5.0

Childcare & Learning

5.5
Verified Apr 2026
How we score β†’

🎟️

How Much Do Lift Tickets Cost at Big Bear Mountain?

The single biggest savings lever at Big Bear is booking everything online before you arrive, the resort explicitly charges more at the ticket window for lift tickets, rentals, and helmets.

  • One ticket, three mountains: A single lift ticket covers Bear Mountain, Snow Summit, and Snow Valley with free shuttle between them. No add-on or upgrade required.
  • Helmet math: Kids 12 and under must wear helmets. Book online for $10; at the window it doubles to $20. Bundle with lessons and it's included free. A family with two kids saves $20 just on this one line item.
  • Youth Program value: The Valley SoCal Youth Program at Snow Valley runs $299-$419 for six lessons, night-session lift tickets, and optional rentals for ages 8-12. Compared to buying six individual lessons Γ  la carte, the savings are structural, not just timing-based.
  • Season pass timing: Passes go on sale in spring/summer and increase mid-season or sell out. Season pass holders also get a free lift ticket on their actual birthday.
  • Locker strategy: Seasonal lockers at Snow Summit and Bear Mountain go on sale in August and sell out. If you're planning multiple trips, grab one early to avoid hauling gear from the car each visit.
  • Where families overspend: Buying anything at the ticket window, renting helmets separately instead of bundling with lessons, and not checking for mid-week pricing drops on the resort website.

We don't have confirmed daily lift ticket prices, the resort uses variable pricing by date and demand. Check bigbearmountainresort.com for current rates before booking.


Planning Your Trip

🏠Where Should Your Family Stay?

Book a cabin or vacation rental in Big Bear Lake town, that's the default strategy and the right one for most families.

  • Best convenience: Rentals within a few minutes' drive of Bear Mountain or Snow Summit in Big Bear Lake proper. Some properties near Bear Mountain's base area offer walk-to-slopes proximity, which eliminates the daily parking scramble on peak weekends. Look for these early, they book fast.
  • Best value: Cabin and condo rentals through VRBO or Airbnb typically undercut hotels and give you a kitchen, critical for families trying to avoid restaurant spending across a long weekend. Budget families should target mid-week stays when rental rates drop noticeably.
  • Best space: Multi-bedroom cabins with hot tubs are Big Bear's signature lodging style. A family of four or five spreads out in ways a hotel room won't allow, and a hot tub after a day on manufactured snow is earned comfort.
  • Snow Valley note: If the Valley SoCal Youth Program is your primary draw, consider lodging in Running Springs instead of Big Bear Lake. Snow Valley sits in a separate town, and staying in Big Bear adds shuttle or drive time each direction.

We don't have verified nightly rate ranges, prices fluctuate by season, day of week, and proximity to slopes. Check VRBO, Airbnb, and local property managers for current availability.


✈️How Do You Get to Big Bear Mountain?

Drive from Los Angeles, that's the play for nearly every family visiting Big Bear, and it's the reason this resort exists as a family option at all.

  • From LA/Orange County: 2-2.5 hours via Highway 330 or Highway 18. San Diego families should budget 3-3.5 hours. Holiday weekends can add an hour each direction.
  • Chain requirements: Highway 18 and Highway 38 both enforce chain control during and after storms. Carry chains even in an AWD vehicle, CHP will turn you around without them.
  • No airport shortcut: Big Bear has no commercial airport. Ontario International (ONT) is the closest major airport at 90 minutes; LAX adds another 30-45 minutes depending on freeway conditions.
  • Between mountains: Bear Mountain and Snow Summit sit in Big Bear Lake town, connected by a free resort shuttle. Snow Valley is in Running Springs, a separate town requiring a different shuttle route, so factor transit time if your plan spans all three.
  • Smartest family move: Arrive Friday evening to a cabin rental, ski Saturday and Sunday, drive home Sunday afternoon. Day-tripping on a peak Saturday means 4+ hours in the car before you touch snow.

β˜•What Can You Do Off the Slopes?

Big Bear Lake town has enough off-slope activity to fill an afternoon, though expectations should match a small mountain community rather than a resort village.

  • Best non-ski snow activity: Snow tubing and sledding are the easiest sells for non-skiing kids or a break day, no skill required, no lesson to book. According to editorial coverage from regional family publications, these rank among the most popular activities for visiting families with young children.
  • More options: Ice skating, bobsledding, snowshoeing, and zip-lining are all available in the Big Bear area. Enough variety to fill a non-ski day without repeating yourself.
  • Evening reality: Big Bear Lake's village area has restaurants and shops within reach of most lodging, but this isn't a late-night town. Expect to be indoors by 8 PM with kids, hot chocolate and a board game in the cabin is the real aprΓ¨s-ski here.
  • Groceries: Stock up in the valley before driving up the mountain. Stores exist in Big Bear Lake town, but selection is limited and prices run higher than lowland supermarkets. A cooler full of sandwich supplies saves real money over three days.
  • Walkability: Getting between lodging, slopes, and restaurants typically requires a car unless you're staying slopeside. The free shuttle covers mountain-to-mountain transit, not town errands.

When to Go

Season at a glance β€” color-coded by family score

Best: January
Season Arc β€” Family Scores by MonthA semicircular visualization showing ski season months color-coded by family recommendation score.JanFebMarAprDecJFMADGreat for familiesGoodFairNo data

Common Questions

Everything families ask about this resort

Private lessons start at age 4. Group lessons start at age 5. There's no childcare option for younger children at any of the three mountains, if your child is under 4 and not in a private lesson, one parent will need to stay off the slopes.

Carry them even if you have AWD. Caltrans enforces chain control on Highway 18 and Highway 38 during and after storms, and officers will turn you around without chains or approved snow tires.

Yes. A single lift ticket covers Bear Mountain, Snow Summit, and Snow Valley. Free shuttles connect the mountains, though Snow Valley in Running Springs is farther from the other two, factor in transit time if you plan to hop between all three.

The resort uses variable pricing and doesn't publish a fixed rate card. Booking online in advance consistently locks in lower rates than buying at the ticket window. Check bigbearmountainresort.com for current pricing on your target dates.

Big Bear relies heavily on snowmaking. Conditions can be excellent when temperatures cooperate, but warm stretches produce icy or thin coverage. Check the resort's snow report within 48 hours of your visit rather than booking based on long-range forecasts.

A six-lesson package at Snow Valley for ages 8-12, priced at $299-$419. It includes night-session lift tickets (3 PM–8:30 PM) before and after each lesson, with optional rental equipment. It's the strongest value for families planning multiple trips in a single season.

Yes, children 12 and under must wear helmets at all three mountains. Helmets are included free when you bundle rentals with lessons. Otherwise, they're $10 booked online or $20 at the ticket window.

Mammoth has far more terrain, more reliable natural snow, and significantly more vertical, but it's 5-6 hours from Los Angeles versus Big Bear's 2-2.5. For a first-timer weekend or casual family snow day, Big Bear's proximity usually wins. For a dedicated week-long ski vacation with varied terrain, Mammoth is the stronger choice.

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

The Bottom Line

Our honest take on Big Bear Mountain

What It Actually Costs

Big Bear is one of the more affordable ski options in the western US, but exact daily costs depend on when you go and how far ahead you book, the resort uses variable pricing with no published fixed rate card.

  • Biggest lever: Book lift tickets, lessons, and rentals online in advance. The resort explicitly charges more at the window. Helmet rental alone doubles from $10 to $20 bought day-of, and that's the only specific price differential we can confirm.
  • Budget family approach: Drive up from LA (free), pack lunches from a cabin kitchen, book tickets online, and bundle rental equipment with lessons so helmets are included. A family of four can ski a day here for significantly less than a comparable day at Mammoth, though we can't quote exact ticket prices until the resort publishes current season rates.
  • Recurring family approach: The Valley SoCal Youth Program ($299-$419 for six lessons plus night-session lift tickets, ages 8-12) represents the best confirmed value for families committing to multiple visits. Pair it with a season pass purchased during the summer presale window for the parent who'll be driving up repeatedly. Season pass holders also get a free lift ticket on their birthday.
  • Where cost creeps: Restaurant meals in Big Bear Lake town, last-minute window purchases, premium weekend pricing, and forgetting to bring chains (roadside rental is expensive and stressful).

Note: A pricing update for this page is pending. We'll add confirmed daily ticket rates once current season pricing is available on bigbearmountainresort.com.

The Honest Tradeoffs

Big Bear relies on snowmaking more than almost any resort you'd consider for a family trip. In warm winters, that means icy patches, thin coverage, and the real possibility that conditions on your booked weekend aren't good enough. There is no natural-snowfall safety net.

  • No childcare at all: None of the three mountains offers nursery or childcare for children under ski-school age. If your youngest is under 4, one parent sits in the lodge while the other skis. Private lessons start at 4; group at 5. No exceptions.
  • Advanced skiers will be bored: The terrain tops out at intermediate, and vertical is modest by any standard beyond Southern California. If your teen already skis blacks confidently, this is a half-day resort for them at best.
  • Snow Valley is farther than it looks: Running Springs is a separate town from Big Bear Lake. Splitting your day across Snow Valley and the other two mountains means shuttle time that eats into skiing.

Would we recommend Big Bear Mountain?

Big Bear Mountain is the right call for SoCal families who want their kids' first snow experience without the commitment of a destination trip. The three-mountain system, Bear Mountain, Snow Summit, and Snow Valley, gives room to grow across multiple visits, and the beginner infrastructure at Bear Mountain is built for total novices.

Skip this if you need reliable natural snow, on-site childcare for toddlers, or anything approaching advanced terrain.

  • Smartest next move: Book lift tickets and lessons online well in advance, ticket window prices run higher, and weekend lesson slots fill fast. Check bigbearmountainresort.com for current variable pricing before committing to a date.