Loveland, United States: Family Ski Guide
$45 kids tickets, high-alpine terrain, 53 miles from Denver.
Last updated: June 2026

United States
Loveland
Book Loveland if your priority is getting your family on real Colorado terrain without the financial bruising of the mega-resorts. The two-base layout lets mixed-ability families split up guilt-free and reconnect at lunch. Valley handles learners; Basin handles everyone else.Buy the 3-Class Kids Pass ($399, ages 6 to 14) before your trip. It includes three lessons plus a season pass. If you visit even twice more after those lessons, you've already beaten the per-day math. Pair it with advance-purchase adult tickets online.If you need a walkable village and slopeside lodging, Keystone is 12 miles west with kids-ski-free and night skiing. Copper Mountain is 15 miles west with natural terrain separation. Breckenridge is 20 miles west with a real town. Loveland trades all resort amenities for the lowest prices on the I-70 corridor.
Is Loveland Good for Families?
Loveland is the best-value high-alpine ski mountain within an hour of Denver. Pull off I-70 at Exit 216 and your kids are skiing terrain topping 13,000 feet for a $45 child day ticket. Two base areas: Valley for learners, Basin for stronger skiers. One thing to know: no village, no slopeside hotel, no après scene.
You're here to ski, eat a cafeteria lunch, and ski more. Families who want atmosphere go to Keystone. Families who want maximum runs per dollar come here.
You need slope-side lodging or a walkable resort village
Biggest tradeoff
What's the Skiing Like for Families?
Loveland Valley is one of the few dedicated beginner base areas in Colorado that's physically separated from the main mountain. Your first-timer isn't dodging intermediates cutting through, Valley has its own parking lot, its own lodge, its own lifts, and its own green-and-blue progression terrain. That separation matters more for anxious new skiers than any amount of "family-friendly" branding.
Here's the learning path your child will follow:
- Magic carpet to first greens: Valley's surface lifts and beginner carpet feed directly into wide, mellow terrain. Kids starting here won't accidentally end up somewhere steep.
- First chairlift: Chair 1 at Loveland Valley serves exclusively green and blue runs, so the leap from carpet to chairlift doesn't come with a terrain surprise.
- First blue runs: Once comfortable on Valley's blues, kids are ready to shuttle or drive two minutes to Basin, where intermediates access a wider network of groomers off multiple lifts.
- First high-alpine experience: Basin's Lift 2 and Lift 6 open up above-treeline terrain that's thrilling for a confident intermediate teenager, and unlike anything available at this price point in Colorado.
- Main friction point: Check-in for children's group lessons happens at Loveland Valley 60-90 minutes before the session starts. If you're driving from Summit County, that means leaving early.
The 3-Class Kids Pass ($399, ages 6-14; $429, ages 4-5) bundles three group lessons with a free season pass for the child. For a family testing whether skiing sticks, that's a low-risk entry: three lessons to find out, plus unlimited return trips if they're hooked.
Families committing to a full season should look at the Loveland Explorers program, six weeks of structured coaching for ages 7-14. According to the resort's website, this isn't the same lesson repeated six times; it's progressive skill-building with consistent instructors across varied terrain. It fills up, so register early.
Licensed childcare at the resort accepts children from 12 months to 12 years, with age-appropriate activities including art projects and outdoor time. That's unusually young for a resort with no slopeside hotel, and it means your toddler has a warm base while older siblings are in lessons and advanced skiers are exploring Basin's bowls.

Trail Map
Full CoverageTerrain by Difficulty
Based on 97 classified runs out of 100 total
© OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL
How Much Are Lift Tickets?
Loveland's pricing is the clearest argument for choosing it over any other front-range Colorado resort. A $45 child day ticket and a $149 adult gate price, at a mountain whose summit hits 13,010 feet, no competitor comes close on the price-to-altitude math.
A family of four (two adults, two kids under 12) pays roughly $388 at the window for a single day. Compare that to Keystone at around $580 or Vail north of $800 for the same family, and the savings are enough to cover two nights of lodging in Georgetown or Idaho Springs.Season passes are where Loveland really separates: the Loveland Season Pass runs around $499 for adults and $249 for children 6-14. Kids 5 and under ski free, every day, no blackout dates. If you are skiing five or more days, the season pass pays for itself.
renting equipment at the mountain instead of at competitive shops along I-70 in Golden or Idaho Springs, which typically undercut resort rental rates by 30-40%. Christy Sports in Idaho Springs and Breeze Ski Rentals in Silverthorne both do boot fitting for children.
Also, if you are basing in Summit County, you are 12 miles from Loveland but also 12 miles from Keystone and Breckenridge. The temptation to "try one day" at a bigger resort can blow a budget when walk-up tickets there run $200+.
Multi-day tickets offer modest discounts (roughly 10% for three-plus days), but the real savings lever is the season pass. Loveland is not on Epic or Ikon, which means no corporate upsell pressure, but it also means no reciprocal days elsewhere.
For families who want one affordable mountain and plan to ski it hard, that trade-off is a feature, not a bug.
Planning Your Trip
✈️How Do You Get to Loveland?
Drive I-70 west from Denver for 53 miles, take Exit 216, and you're there, Loveland sits just before the Eisenhower Tunnel, so you never descend into Summit County.
- Best airport: Denver International (DEN), with the widest domestic route network in the Mountain West. Budget carriers including Frontier and Southwest serve DEN year-round.
- Transfer reality: No confirmed shuttle service runs directly to Loveland. A rental car is essentially mandatory. Make sure it meets Colorado's Traction Law (M+S rated tires minimum), or carry chains.
- Midweek drive time: About 75 minutes from Denver. Straightforward, mostly highway.
- Weekend warning: Saturday mornings and Sunday afternoons on I-70 are notoriously congested. A 75-minute drive can stretch to 2.5 hours. Leave Denver before 7am on Saturdays or accept the crawl.
- Smartest family move: If skiing multiple days, base in Silverthorne or Dillon (12 miles west) and drive east to Loveland each morning. You'll travel against the Denver-to-mountains traffic flow, which is lighter in that direction.
CDOT closes I-70 entirely during heavy storms. Check conditions at cotrip.org the morning of your drive.
One family-specific detail worth knowing: Loveland has two base areas, Loveland Valley (beginner, lower elevation) and Loveland Basin (everything else, higher up). Valley is accessed at Exit 216, Basin at Exit 216 then a short drive west. If you have a mix of beginners and intermediates, coordinate which base you are meeting at before you split up for the morning.

🏠Where Should Your Family Stay?
Your decision is directional: sleep east of Loveland (closer to Denver, cheaper) or west (closer to other resorts and real towns).
- Best convenience, Summit County condos (Dillon, Silverthorne, Keystone): 12-15 miles west via I-70. Vacasa-listed condos range roughly $135-$328/night. You get grocery stores, restaurants, and the option to ski Keystone or Breckenridge on a rest day. One thing to know: you'll drive east through the Eisenhower Tunnel each morning, which is usually light traffic headed that direction.
- Best value, Georgetown or Silver Plume: 15-20 minutes east on I-70. Quieter, cheaper, and closer. Larger rental houses exist, a six-bedroom in Silver Plume has been noted for group bookings. One thing to know: very limited dining and grocery options. Stock up in Idaho Springs before you arrive.
- Budget play, Denver day-trip: Sleep at a Denver hotel or Airbnb, drive up each morning. Eliminates mountain-area lodging costs entirely. One thing to know: I-70 weekend traffic, and acclimatizing is harder when you sleep at 5,280 feet and ski at 10,800+.
We don't have verified nightly rates for Georgetown-area properties in the current season.
One thing to know: Loveland has no slopeside lodging at all. There is no hotel, no condo, and no warming hut you can sleep in at the base. Every family here is driving in, which means your lodging choice is really a commute choice.
Factor in grocery access when deciding: Silverthorne has a Walmart and City Market, while Georgetown has a single small store.
☕What's There to Do Off the Slopes?
After-ski life at Loveland itself is minimal, no village, no bar strip, no evening programming. Your off-mountain experience depends entirely on where you sleep.
- Warm-up stop: The Basin lodge cafeteria is functional but not a destination. Expect standard mountain food at standard mountain prices. It's where families regroup after a morning split between Valley and Basin.
- Summit County evenings: Dillon and Silverthorne offer real restaurants, a Walmart and City Market for self-catering groceries, and the Silverthorne outlet stores for non-ski shopping. For sit-down family dinners, Dillon Dam Brewery has a kids' menu and enough noise that nobody notices yours.
- Georgetown: This small historic mining town (~20 minutes east on I-70) has a walkable main street and a handful of family restaurants. The Georgetown Loop Railroad is a genuine kid-pleaser on a non-ski day, running vintage narrow-gauge trains across a reconstructed trestle bridge.
- Walkability at the resort: Zero. You'll be in your car for everything.
- Best off-ski activity: Dillon Reservoir offers scenic winter walks and fat-tire biking on cleared paths, a good antidote to a morning of altitude fatigue for families who want fresh air without more vertical.
- Rest day option: The Silverthorne Recreation Center has a public pool with a water slide, open swim sessions, and drop-in rates around USD 8 per adult. Cheaper and less crowded than any resort pool within 30 miles.

When to Go
Season at a glance — color-coded by family score
Common Questions
Everything families ask about this resort
Have a question we didn't cover? We'd love to add it to our guide.
The Bottom Line
Would we recommend Loveland?
What It Actually Costs
Adult advance tickets run roughly $104/day. Child tickets (6 to 14) cost $45/day. Kids 5 and under ski free. Equipment rental from Denver or Idaho Springs shops runs $30 to $45/day for adults, $20 to $30 for kids. Group lessons start at $140/day for ages 4 to 12.
A budget family of four skiing five days with Denver lodging at $120/night and self-catering runs roughly $3,200. A comfort family staying in Summit County at $180/night with mountain dining runs $4,800+. No slopeside lodging exists, so the choice is Summit County (closer, more expensive) or Denver (cheaper, 90-minute drive each way).The Denver option saves $300+ in accommodation over five nights but adds 3+ hours of cumulative daily driving.
The 3-Class Kids Pass at $399 per child includes three lessons plus a season pass. For a returning Colorado family, this is the single best deal on the I-70 corridor.
Compare to Keystone ($4,300 to $4,750/week all-in with kids-ski-free), Breckenridge ($6,400+/week), or Copper Mountain ($4,700+/week budget). Loveland is significantly cheaper on the mountain but requires more logistics off it.
Your smartest money move: Buy the 3-Class Kids Pass ($399/child) for three lessons plus a season pass. Stay in Idaho Springs ($100/night, 30-minute drive) as a compromise between Denver distance and Summit County pricing. Rent equipment before the drive to save $15 to $20/day per person.
The Honest Tradeoffs
There is no village, no slopeside hotel, and no walkable evening scene. Every ski day at Loveland starts and ends with a drive, either 12 miles from Summit County or 53 miles from Denver. If your family's ski-trip memories include cozy village walks and restaurant hopping, Loveland won't deliver that part. Breckenridge or Keystone will.
Slow lifts. Multiple lift systems are dated. On cold, windy days, Loveland's exposed high-alpine position makes the rides feel long. And wind-scoured conditions mean off-piste terrain can be hardpack within hours of a storm.
Loveland isn't on Epic, Ikon, or any multi-resort pass. Every visit is a standalone purchase. But adult day tickets top out at $99 at the window, and online pricing is lower. A family of four here costs what two adults pay at Vail down the road.
Should the tradeoffs outweigh the wins, consider Copper Mountain for Kids Ski Free with Ikon Pass and on-mountain lodging options.
Would we recommend Loveland?
Book Loveland if your priority is getting your family on real Colorado terrain without the financial bruising of the mega-resorts. The two-base layout lets mixed-ability families split up guilt-free and reconnect at lunch. Valley handles learners; Basin handles everyone else.
Buy the 3-Class Kids Pass ($399, ages 6 to 14) before your trip. It includes three lessons plus a season pass. If you visit even twice more after those lessons, you've already beaten the per-day math. Pair it with advance-purchase adult tickets online.
If you need a walkable village and slopeside lodging, Keystone is 12 miles west with kids-ski-free and night skiing. Copper Mountain is 15 miles west with natural terrain separation. Breckenridge is 20 miles west with a real town. Loveland trades all resort amenities for the lowest prices on the I-70 corridor.
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Transparency note: This content was created with AI assistance and reviewed by Tom Meredith, our editor. Prices, dates, and availability may change. We recommend confirming details directly with the resort before booking.