Windham Mountain, United States: Family Ski Guide
Two hours from the city, ski school starts at three.
Last updated: May 2026

United States
Windham Mountain
Book Windham if your kids are under eight and you want to build a ski-family identity without committing to a Vermont week or a Colorado flight. The age-3 ski school, managed capacity, and two-hour drive from the Taconic corridor make it the lowest-friction entry point into skiing for NYC families. Do not book Windham if your family includes a strong intermediate or advanced teenager who needs real terrain variety. They'll cover every trail by lunch on day one. Your booking sequence: Reserve ski school first, spots fill fast on Saturdays. Then buy lift tickets online (walk-up is not guaranteed). Then lock in lodging. Total planning time: 30 minutes after the kids are down.
Is Windham Mountain Good for Families?
You pull off the Taconic into Greene County on a Friday evening, the Catskills dark and quiet, and by 9 a.m. Saturday your three-year-old is in ski school, the youngest age any resort within two hours of the George Washington Bridge will take them. Windham Mountain is the best first-ski destination for NYC metro families, full stop. The catch: zero expert terrain and a $129 adult day pass mean stronger skiers pay a premium to be underwhelmed. For beginners and young families building a weekend ski habit, nothing closer does it better.
Advanced or expert skiers who will lap the mountain by noon
Biggest tradeoff
What's the Skiing Like for Families?
Windham is an easy-mode learning mountain with an 6.6/10 beginner terrain score, and that number holds up in practice. The 24% beginner terrain sounds modest on paper, but the runs are wide, well-groomed, and physically separated from faster traffic, your kid isn't dodging teenagers on their first day.
The 52% intermediate share is where the mountain actually lives. Once a child graduates from greens, they have genuine room to grow before the family outgrows the resort.
Progression rundown:
- First carpet: The learning area at the base has its own magic carpet lift, fenced off from the main runs. Three-year-olds in ski school start here, and the incline is gentle enough that falls are slow-motion tumbles, not yard sales.
- First green: Lower Wolverine and Lower Wraparound are the natural next step, wide, consistent pitch, no surprise steeps. Lower Wraparound also hosts the Mini Park, so kids who want a tiny jump can try one without leaving beginner territory.
- First chairlift: All 11 lifts use RFID gates installed during an $8 million capital upgrade in 2018-2019. No fumbling with paper tickets in mittens. Load your child's pass into a jacket pocket once and forget it.
- First blue: Upper Whistler and Wanderer are approachable intermediate runs, consistent gradient, no mogul surprises. A confident six-year-old who spent two weekends on greens can handle these with an adult alongside.
- First park: The Mini Park on Lower Wraparound is built for small kids, tabletop features under two feet high. Older kids and teens graduate to Wilbur Park or Lower Warpath Park, which have rails and medium jumps.
- The ceiling: 24% advanced terrain and zero expert terrain. Advanced runs here would rate blue-black at a larger mountain. A strong 12-year-old who skis annually will find them fun for a morning and repetitive by afternoon.
The honest friction point: Windham's 285 acres and 54 trails are enough for two or three weekends a season. Families who ski five-plus days a year will feel the mountain shrink by year two.
For mixed-ability families: The layout works if expectations are set. Your advanced skier can lap the upper mountain while beginners stay at the base, but there's no genuine expert challenge to keep them occupied all day. The mountain's strength is that everyone can meet at the base lodge within five minutes from any trail.

📊The Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Family Score | 6.6Good |
Best Age Range | 3–14 years |
Kid-Friendly Terrain | 24%Average |
Ski School Min Age | 3 years |
Kids Ski Free | — |
Score Breakdown
Value for Money
Convenience
Things to Do
Parent Experience
Childcare & Learning
Planning Your Trip
💬What Do Other Parents Think?
Your first morning at Windham should follow this sequence, deviating from it costs time and patience.
- Before you arrive: Buy lift tickets online. Windham actively manages capacity, and walk-up tickets are not guaranteed. Download the resort's beginner tip sheet from their website, it covers terrain recommendations by ability level and is in fact useful.
- 8:30 a.m., Gear up: The base lodge rental shop opens early. Pick up gear here. If you brought your own, the on-mountain shop offers same-day tune and wax service (reported at $25 for a wax and sharpen).
- 9:00 a.m., Ski school drop-off: Kids programs run full-day with age brackets at 3, 4-6, and 7-12. The age-3 program requires full potty training, no diapers, no pull-ups. This is enforced, not a suggestion. If your child isn't reliably trained, wait a season.
- 9:15 a.m., Your time: Once the kids are checked in, you have until pickup to ski. First-time adults should book a group or private lesson, the beginner area is right at the base, so you won't be far from your child.
- 12:00 p.m., Lunch: Mountain Express Cafeteria at the base handles midday fueling. Pack snacks in your jacket to avoid the noon rush.
- 3:30 p.m., Pickup: Collect your child, compare notes on the car ride home. By the second visit, they'll be asking when the next one is.
We don't have confirmed pricing for ski school lessons, check the Windham Mountain Club website or call ahead to book, as Saturday spots fill early in the season.
Families on the Slopes
(8 photos)Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.
How Much Are Lift Tickets?
Windham is not a budget mountain. At $129 for an adult day pass and roughly twice Hunter's season-pass pricing, you're paying for managed crowds and polished facilities, not steep terrain.
- Advance online pricing: Pre-purchased "Red day" tickets have been listed at approximately $99 through the resort's ticket portal. That's a $30 saving per adult per day, for a family of two adults over a weekend, that's $120 back in your pocket. Never buy at the window.
- Child passes: Approximately $45 per day for kids. We haven't confirmed a free-ski-under-age threshold, check the resort site before assuming your four-year-old skis free.
- Mid-week lever: Prices may not drop, but crowds do. A Monday or Friday ski day means shorter lift lines and more instructor attention in group lessons. If your work schedule allows it, this is the single biggest quality-of-life upgrade.
- Pack lunch: A grocery store sits about 10 minutes from the resort. Load a backpack with sandwiches and snacks. Mountain Express Cafeteria works in a pinch, but feeding a family of four at base-lodge prices adds $40-60 to your day.
- Season pass math: If you'll ski four or more days, price out Windham's season pass against day tickets. At $129/day, four days is $516 per adult. Compare that to the season pass cost, and factor in that the Epic Pass is accepted here, which may unlock multi-resort value if you ski elsewhere too.
- The accidental overspend: Rental gear at the resort is convenient but rarely the cheapest option. If you're committing to multiple weekends, buying used kids' gear from a play-it-again sports shop in the Hudson Valley will pay for itself by trip three.
Planning Your Trip
🏠Where Should Your Family Stay?
Book on-mountain lodging if you can get it, eliminating a morning drive with small children is worth more than any amenity list.
- Best convenience, Mountainside or Winwood Condos (on-mountain): Managed through Windham Mountain Club, these put you steps from the base lodge. Families report the condos allow self-catering, which saves significantly on meals. Nightly rates aren't published transparently, call the resort directly for availability and expect to book early for Saturday nights.
- Best flexibility, Windham village Airbnbs: The town of Windham has a steady inventory of vacation rentals, many within a 10-minute drive. Families on review sites report finding three-bedroom houses at lower nightly rates than on-mountain options. The catch: you're driving each morning.
- Best splurge, The View (ski-in/ski-out rental): A 5-bed, 6-bath private home sleeping 14, with a pool room and Dolby Atmos cinema. This is the multi-family share option, split four ways, it becomes a reasonable per-family cost for a special trip.
We don't have verified nightly rates for any lodging tier. Budget families should price Windham village rentals against on-mountain condos before assuming the village is cheaper.
✈️How Do You Get to Windham Mountain?
Two hours from Brewster or Rockland County, under three hours from lower Manhattan, this is a drive, not a journey.
- Best route from NYC: Taconic Parkway north to I-87, then Route 23 west through the Rip Van Winkle Bridge corridor. Friday evening traffic adds 30-45 minutes; leave by 4 p.m. to arrive before dark.
- From Albany Airport (ALB): 50-minute drive, useful if grandparents are flying in from elsewhere.
- Parking: Free, and the lodge is a three-minute walk from the lot. Overflow lots have a shuttle.
- Winter warning: Route 23 climbs steeply in the final stretch. Chains are rarely needed, but all-wheel drive or snow tires earn their keep on icy mornings.

☕What's There to Do Off the Slopes?
After-ski at Windham is low-key, this is a weekend mountain, not a village with nightlife.
- Best warm-up stop: The Umbrella Bar at the base lodge is the default après-ski spot. Expect beer, hot chocolate, and parents comparing their kids' ski school reports.
- Evening reality: Downtown Windham has a handful of dinner restaurants within a short drive. Families on review sites mention eating in town, but specific restaurant names are sparse in available data, ask at the lodge for current recommendations.
- Non-ski activities: Snow tubing and snowshoeing are available on-site. The Windham Mountain Club's year-round identity includes fly fishing, sporting clays, and golf, relevant if you're considering a summer return, less so in January.
- Day-trip option: Hunter Mountain is 7 miles and 17 minutes away. If an advanced skier in your group needs a change of scenery, a half-day at Hunter adds variety without a major logistics commitment.

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 Windham Mountain?
What It Actually Costs
A Saturday at Windham for a family of four (two adults, two kids) costs roughly $350-400 in lift tickets alone at window rates, before lessons, food, or gear. This is not a cheap day out. It is, however, a controllable spend if you work the levers.
- Budget weekend (2 adults, 2 kids, 1 day): Pre-purchase Red day tickets ($99 × 2 adults + $45 × 2 kids = $288). Pack lunch ($0). Drive from the Hudson Valley ($30 gas). Skip rentals if you own gear. Total: approximately $320. That's a real day of skiing for under $350.
- Comfort weekend (2 adults, 2 kids, 2 days + 1 night): Full-price tickets for 2 days ($129 × 2 × 2 = $516 adults + $45 × 2 × 2 = $180 kids). One night on-mountain lodging (estimate $250-400, call for rates). Meals and rentals on top. Total: likely $1,100-1,400. This is where Windham's pricing becomes a real conversation between partners.
- The comparison anchor: Hunter Mountain, seven miles away, runs roughly half the season-pass cost according to forum-reported pricing. If your family doesn't need age-3 ski school or managed capacity, Hunter delivers more ski days per dollar. The tradeoff is significantly larger Saturday crowds.
The smartest cost move: commit to advance online ticket purchases for every visit. The $30 per adult saving compounds fast across a season of weekends.
The Honest Tradeoffs
Zero expert terrain and only 285 acres mean a strong skier in your family will cover every run by lunchtime on day one. There is no back bowl, no steep chute, no hidden stash. If your teenager rips blacks at Killington, they will be bored here.
The price premium is real. At roughly twice Hunter Mountain's season-pass cost and $129 per adult day pass, you're paying for a polished experience on a small mountain. Families who prioritize terrain quantity over crowd management will find better value elsewhere.
Natural snowfall averages just 57 inches per year, less than half of what Vermont resorts receive. Windham relies heavily on snowmaking, and late-season conditions can be icy. We don't have confirmed snowmaking coverage data.
If Windham isn't right for your family:
- Hunter Mountain (7 miles away): Roughly half the price, more terrain variety, but significantly more crowded on weekends and no age-3 ski school.
- Belleayre Mountain (11 miles away): State-run, cheaper, with a strong beginner reputation, but less polished facilities and no guaranteed age-3 enrollment.
- Stratton Mountain, Vermont (3.5 hours): If you want a proper multi-day family ski trip with real terrain depth, the extra 90 minutes of driving opens up a different class of mountain.
Would we recommend Windham Mountain?
Book Windham if your kids are under eight and you want to build a ski-family identity without committing to a Vermont week or a Colorado flight. The age-3 ski school, managed capacity, and two-hour drive from the Taconic corridor make it the lowest-friction entry point into skiing for NYC families.
Do not book Windham if your family includes a strong intermediate or advanced teenager who needs real terrain variety. They'll cover every trail by lunch on day one.
Your booking sequence: Reserve ski school first, spots fill fast on Saturdays. Then buy lift tickets online (walk-up is not guaranteed). Then lock in lodging. Total planning time: 30 minutes after the kids are down.
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