Browse Family Ski Resorts
58 family-friendly resorts worldwide with complete trip guides, cost breakdowns, and detailed family information.
Andorra
2 resorts
Germany
2 resorts
Japan
12 resorts

Tomamu
Hokkaido, Japan
“Powder swallows kids whole, 70% beginner terrain, $$-level pricing.”

Shiga Kogen
Nagano, Japan
“18 ski areas connected by shuttles, $26 tickets, ages 4-17.”

Rusutsu
Hokkaido, Japan
“Hokkaido powder, ski-in/out rooms, $64 tickets, no crowds.”

Myoko Kogen
Niigata Prefecture, Japan
“Four separate villages, deep powder, onsen after skiing.”

Appi Kogen
Japan
“Powder snow until May, hot springs next door, ¥4,000 tickets.”

Kiroro
Hokkaido, Japan
“Childcare from 24 months, parents ski 8 uninterrupted hours daily.”

Niseko
Hokkaido, Japan
“Four linked villages, $16 kid tickets, onsen after skiing.”

Nozawa Onsen
Nagano Prefecture, Japan
“13 free hot springs, English ski school, $320 daily family cost.”

Madarao
Japan
“Powder tree runs, hot spring village, 30 minutes from Nagano.”

Furano
Hokkaido, Japan
“Japanese powder skiing, basic English, ages 8-16 recommended.”

Hakuba Valley
Nagano, Japan
“10 resorts, one pass, hot springs between runs.”

Sahoro
Hokkaido, Japan
“One price covers lift tickets, meals, lessons, and Hokkaido powder.”
Slovakia
1 resort
Sweden
4 resorts

Åre
Jämtland, Sweden
“Train to slopes, reindeer sightings, fika breaks between runs.”

Idre Fjäll
Dalarna, Sweden
“Three mountains, one pass, zero queues during sportlov week.”

Sälen
Dalarna, Sweden
“Ski-through McDonald's, wooden trolls in snow, 70% beginner slopes.”

Riksgränsen
Norrbotten, Sweden
“Midnight sun, t-shirts in May, ski until June.”
United States
37 resorts

Park City
Utah, United States
“7,300 acres, ski-to-Main Street, $1,350 daily family budget.”

Aspen Snowmass
Colorado, United States
“Four mountains, $1,050 daily budget, Treehouse center keeps kids happy.”

Vail
Colorado, United States
“$407 tickets, but kids actually progress from greens to blues.”

Solitude
Utah, United States
“29 miles from Salt Lake, ski two resorts on one pass.”

Breckenridge
Colorado, United States
“Five peaks, kids ski free at 5, walk to dinner downtown.”

Grand Targhee
Wyoming, United States
“Slopeside lodging, $12 kid tickets, meltdowns solved in 60 seconds.”

Palisades Tahoe
California, United States
“Two villages, $269 tickets, teens actually use terrain parks.”

Sun Valley
Idaho, United States
“Two mountains, $12 kid tickets, instruction beats Colorado resorts.”

Deer Valley
Utah, United States
“No snowboarders, perfectly groomed blues, $37 lift tickets.”

Alta
Utah, United States
“540 inches of powder, zero snowboarders, same lodge week since 1987.”

Sunday River
Maine, United States
“Eight peaks, one lift ticket, three hours from Boston.”

Steamboat
Colorado, United States
“25-minute drive to slopes, half the price of Vail.”

Mammoth Mountain
California, United States
“5-hour drive from LA, serious terrain, $105 tickets.”

Snowbird
Utah, United States
“Childcare from 6 weeks, 30 minutes from Salt Lake City.”

Sugarloaf
United States
“2,820 feet vertical, 162 trails, two hours from Boston.”

Brighton
United States
“Four ski mountains, $79 tickets, 20 minutes from Salt Lake.”

Mount Snow
Vermont, United States
“4 hours from the city, first-timers on chairlifts by lunch.”

Winter Park
Colorado, United States
“Ski train from Denver, 3,000 acres, 30% cheaper than Summit County.”

Whiteface
United States
“3,430-foot vertical drop, Olympic legacy, two hours from NYC.”

Killington
Vermont, United States
“Teen skiers get maximum vertical, ski school starts age 2.”

Crested Butte
Colorado, United States
“Epic Pass resort, no lift lines, 1880s mining town intact.”

Beaver Creek
Colorado, United States
“$250 lift tickets, 85% beginner terrain, no toddler daycare.”

Bretton Woods
New Hampshire, United States
“464 acres, ski-in rentals, cook Thanksgiving while kids nap.”

Stevens Pass
Washington, United States
“Under 2 hours from Seattle, night skiing beats traffic home.”

Mount Bachelor
Oregon, United States
“Volcano summit, 410 inches of snow, seven months of skiing.”

Stowe
Vermont, United States
“Front Four double-blacks, $131 tickets, 3-hour drive from Boston.”

Heavenly
California, United States
“Ski California to Nevada mid-run, $65 tickets, town access.”

Smugglers Notch
Vermont, United States
“Three mountains, $17 kid tickets, condos with full kitchens.”

Jackson Hole
Wyoming, United States
“75% expert terrain, $30 tickets, teenagers finally challenged.”

Big Sky
Montana, United States
“Teenagers get steep runs, parents get $98 tickets, nobody gets crowds.”

Whitefish
Montana, United States
“7-mile drive to slopes, $115 tickets, zero crowds.”

Northstar
California, United States
“Ski-in lodging, age 3 lessons, $850 daily without Heavenly crowds.”

Copper Mountain
Colorado, United States
“Terrain splits by skill level, $29 tickets, no regrouping chaos.”

Jay Peak
Vermont, United States
“Nearly 400 inches of snow, then dry off at the indoor waterpark.”

Snowshoe Mountain
United States
“Four-hour drive from DC, snowmaking on every trail, $89 tickets.”

Kirkwood
United States
“2,000 inches annual snowfall, steep terrain, no grooming on weekends.”

Loon Mountain
New Hampshire, United States
“Glacial caves, ziplines, and a gondola, skis optional.”
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