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Park City Skiing Report: Early Season Challenges and Advice for Powder Chasers

Park City Skiing Report: Early Season Challenges and Advice for Powder Chasers

Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Ski Report for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah

Daily Ski Conditions for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah

Park City Mountain is open but skiing is skinny right now: base depths are shallow, only a fraction of lifts and runs are operating, and the mountain is watching a series of warm, low-snow storms that will give a few inches at best while keeping lower elevations soggy and windy.
Park City’s reported base depth was about 17 inches in mid-December and the resort lists roughly a dozen lifts in service out of its ~41 total; that matches independent trackers showing about 12 of ~41 lifts and limited terrain open.
Recent new snowfall has been modest — most sources show light accumulations in the last 24–48 hours (a couple inches at most), with forecasts calling for another 1–4 inches over the next two to three days depending on elevation and storm track.
Current weather on the mountain is variable: the resort’s weather briefings have indicated snow showers with falling temperatures and gusty southwest to westerly winds, and local forecasts warn of strong winds on ridgelines that could exceed 45 mph during storms.
Five-day forecasts from mountain-focused services expect a mix of light snow showers and warm, moisture-laden systems that will produce higher-elevation snow but rain or freezing-rain near the base; expect highs in the 30s to low 40s °F and overnight lows near or below freezing at elevation.
Piste conditions right now are largely groomed on the limited, opened runs (the resort has been prioritizing bunny hills, Homerun and Kokopelli plus Three Kings terrain park), but many intermediate and advanced runs remain closed due to thin coverage.
Off‑piste terrain is thin and variable — low snowpack and recent warm storms have produced areas of iciness, bare spots and refrozen melt layers at lower elevations, and avalanche and safety advisories should be checked before any backcountry travel since coverage is inconsistent.
Season-to-date totals remain below a typical winter for the Wasatch; Park City’s long‑term average is roughly 300–355 inches but early-season reports and local coverage indicate 2025–26 has started below average with statewide snowpack approaching unusually low levels for this time of year.
Important visitor notes for timing your turns: expect limited terrain and possible lift line clustering on the open runs, bring layered, waterproof gear for warm-snow or rain near the base, and prepare for high winds and rapidly changing conditions at ridge-top elevations.
If you’re chasing powder, focus on higher-elevation aspects after fresh overnight snows and keep plans flexible — check the resort’s real-time lift and trail updates, live cams, and avalanche forecasts before heading out; the Epic app and the Park City conditions page are the best single sources for minute-by-minute operational alerts.
Locals are saying: enjoy the groomers while they’re good, don’t expect wide-open mountain days yet, and if you’ve got a trip booked, pack patience — a few storms are coming and could change the picture quickly, but for now skiing is limited and best suited to those happy with early-season, variable conditions.

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