Mt. Spokane Ski and Snowboard Park Ski Resort

WASHINGTON / MT. SPOKANE SKI AND SNOWBOARD PARK

Elevation
4,200'
Base
5,889'
Summit
2,000'
Vertical Drop
Trails
55
1,704 Acres
Lifts
8
3 Types
Snowfall
142"
Annual Snowfall
14"
Nov
41"
Dec
43"
Jan
33"
Feb
22"
Mar
6"
Apr

Best known for

Mt. Spokane Ski and Snowboard Park

Where to Stay

Plan Your Trip

Important Dates

Projected opening date

Nov 29, 2024

Projected closing date

Apr 06, 2025

Projected Days Open

103

Days Open Last Year

100

Years Open

87

Average Snowfall

300"

Terrain

Runs in Total
55
Longest Run
0.6 mi
Skiable Terrain
1,704 ac
Night Skiing
45 ac

Lifts

8

Triple Chairs
1
Double Chairs
5
Surface Lifts
2

Inside Scoop

Reviews

Hank

I've skied here more than any other mountain in the area- probably 80 days over the last 3 years. My kids and wife all went through multi-week learn-to-ski programs here and they all had good experiences. This is in spite of the relative lack of good beginner terrain- one of the mountains two great weaknesses. The conveyer belt area is very short and the beginner terrain served by lift 5 is also the main route to the lodge, so people come flying through regularly. Its not a good set-up, but without reimagining how the entire mountain operates, it is what it is. The lifts are weakness 2 and the achilles heal of Mt. Spokane. Every single lift is due for replacement except chair 6. Every. Single. One. Chair 1 was installed before Elvis became famous and chair 2 beat The Beatles to North America. 3,4, and 5 each have their issues and while you can function without 4 (though it serves the best skiing on the mountain) 3 and 5 are vital to mountain ops and they just can't keep up on days that are even somewhat busy. That said, the night skiing is the best thing Mt. Spokane has to offer and what really sets it apart in the Inland NW. However, I think they've figured that out. The cost of a night ticket has gone up each of the last 3 years. TLDR: Survive the lifts, enjoy the trees, avoid the weekends.

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