Deer Valley
City:
Park City
Region:
Rockies
Updated:
October 31, 2024
70
PeakRankings Score
To give each resort a Mountain Score, we assess 10 equally weighted categories that paint an overall picture of the typical mountain experience.
[Year] Rankings
Overall Rank
#
28
Rank In
United States
#
22
Rank In
Utah
#
4
Category Scores
Snow

Criteria Breakdown
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10
The resort gets top accumulation and snow that forms in a way that feels light and powdery all the time.
9
The resort sees very good accumulation and gets powder that takes awhile to track or feels notably light.
8
The resort sees very good snow accumulation each season that tends to stay powdery for several days in a row.
7
The resort sees very good, powdery snow accumulation each season, but powder doesn't always last long at certain places in the resort.
6
The resort sees good accumulation that forms a solid base each season and sometimes sees powder but sometimes suffers from variable cover.
5
The resort sees decent accumulation each season but sometimes suffers from variable cover and rarely sees powder.
4
The resort sees okay accumulation each season. Non-snowmaking trails regularly suffer from thin or variable cover.
3
The resort sees mediocre accumulation each season. Thin cover is a given on all non-snowmaking trails.
2
The resort receives poor accumulation each season and must heavily rely on snowmaking to stay open.
1
The resort would have little to no snow if it weren't for snowmaking. If you're not on a trail, you probably don't see any accumulation.
0
The resort doesn’t get any snow.
8
Lifts

Criteria Breakdown
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10
High-speed lifts exist across every mountain area. Helper lifts are high-speed as well.
9
Most lifts are high-speed, with only a few areas serviced by helper fixed-grip lifts.
8
All but a few areas are accessible by high-speed lifts. Helper lifts may be fixed grip.
7
Most areas are accessible by high-speed lifts. Helper lifts are fixed grip.
6
Many areas are accessible by high-speed lifts, but some are only serviced by fixed-grip lifts.
5
About half of areas are accessible by high-speed lifts.
4
A few areas are accessible by high-speed lifts, but most areas only see fixed-grip lift service.
3
All lifts are fixed grip but some are at least modern.
2
Lifts are extremely old or low-capacity. Some places are only serviced by surface lifts.
1
Surface lifts only.
0
No lifts.
8
Resiliency

Criteria Breakdown
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10
The mountain can quickly recover from the worst conditions and deliver the exact same experience as on a good day.
9
The mountain can quickly recover from almost any poor conditions thanks to excellent poor snow and weather mitigation.
8
The mountain successfully mitigates snow or weather issues in nearly every mountain area and across all terrain categories. A few parts of the resort may occasionally see significant impacts.
7
The mountain successfully mitigates snow or weather issues in most mountain areas, but some parts of the mountain are highly affected by inclement weather or poor conditions.
6
The mountain successfully mitigates snow or weather issues in many mountain areas, but other parts are highly susceptible to inclement weather or poor conditions.
5
The mountain has some capabilities to avoid inclement weather or poor conditions, but struggles to mitigate poor conditions in many mountain areas.
4
The mountain has some capabilities to avoid inclement weather or poor conditions, but is regularly forced to close a few major parts of the mountain. Under severe circumstances, the mountain may be forced to completely suspend operations.
3
The mountain has some capabilities to avoid inclement weather or poor conditions, but is regularly forced to close multiple major mountain areas. Occasionally, the mountain may be forced to suspend operations completely.
2
In the event of any inclement weather, the mountain loses most of its skiable terrain, with restoration regularly taking several days or weeks. A few small runs may stay open.
1
In the event of any inclement weather, the mountain loses its entire skiable footprint and may take weeks to recover.
0
Any inclement weather issues are season-ending.
8
Crowd Flow

Criteria Breakdown
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10
The mountain's infrastructure is perfectly set up for crowd flow and capacity and does the best possible job to mitigate crowding.
9
The mountain's lift infrastructure is mostly direct and well-placed with excellent capacity.
8
The mountain's lift infrastructure is mostly direct and well-placed with good capacity. One or two areas could use a capacity upgrade.
7
The mountain's lift infrastructure is usually direct and well-placed with good capacity. A few areas could use a capacity upgrade or better placed lifts. Trails themselves rarely become chokepoints.
6
The mountain's lift and trail network is usually direct with good capacity. Some areas suffer from indirect lift placements or poorly thought out junctions.
5
The mountain’s lift and trail network comprises a comparable mix of direct, well-placed routes and indirect or capacity-constrained ones.
4
The mountain's lift and trail network is set up in a way that causes major crowding or indirect routing for many popular routes. Some areas are served by direct, well-placed lifts.
3
The mountain's lift and trail network causes serious crowding or indirect routing for most areas, but a few places are served by direct, well-placed lifts.
2
The mountain's lift and trail network is not equipped to handle crowds on a normal day and sees backups of more than half an hour.
1
The mountain's crowd flow logistics are seriously flawed. Poor lift placement and uphill capacity can cause backups of more than an hour.
0
The mountain's crowd flow logistics are so bad that you shouldn't expect to get on the mountain on a typical day.
7
Size

Criteria Breakdown
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10
7000+ skiable acres
9
3500-7000 skiable acres
8
2500-3500 skiable acres
7
1800-2500 skiable acres
6
1200-1800 skiable acres
5
800-1200 skiable acres
4
500-800 skiable acres
3
250-500 skiable acres
2
100-250 skiable acres
1
1-100 skiable acres
0
0 skiable acres
7
Facilities

Criteria Breakdown
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10
The mountain boasts easily accessible, high-capacity lodges at every major and minor junction area.
9
The mountain boasts easily accessible, high-capacity lodges throughout most mountain areas.
8
The mountain boasts several lodges or huts across the resort. A few minor mid- or high-elevation areas lack easy access to high-capacity facilities.
7
The mountain boasts several lodges or huts across the resort. Some major mountain areas lack easy access to high-capacity facilities.
6
The mountain boasts several lodges or huts across multiple areas, but some places lack easy access to the closest facilities.
5
The mountain consists of high-capacity lodges at each base area but suffers from limited, low-capacity, or impractically placed on-mountain facilities.
4
The mountain consists of high-capacity lodges at each base area. Any on-mountain facilities are limited, low-capacity, and impractically placed.
3
The mountain consists of at least one high-capacity base lodge but no on-mountain facilities.
2
The mountain consists of a moderately-sized base lodge but no on-mountain facilities.
1
The mountain consists of a singular base lodge that's either impractically small or hard to reach.
0
The mountain doesn't consist of any on-site lodge facilities.
9
Terrain Diversity

Criteria Breakdown
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10
The mountain has an abundance of terrain in all categories for all ability levels.
9
The mountain offers multiple options in all terrain categories you'd typically find at a ski resort.
8
The mountain offers at least some options in all terrain categories you'd typically find at a ski resort.
7
The mountain offers terrain in most categories for a range of ability levels, but may fall short in one or two areas.
6
The mountain offers terrain in many categories but either falls short or lacks terrain in a few others.
5
The mountain offers terrain of varying lengths, gradients, and widths but lacks terrain in multiple categories.
4
The mountain offers similar terrain of moderately different lengths, gradients, and widths.
3
The mountain offers similar terrain of slightly different lengths, gradients, or widths.
2
The mountain consists of runs that are similar to one another but vary slightly by difficulty.
1
The mountain only consists of runs that provide nearly identical terrain experiences.
0
The mountain has no terrain.
7
Navigation

Criteria Breakdown
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10
It's easy, direct, and clear to get anywhere on the mountain from any place.
9
It's easy, direct, and clear to get anywhere on the mountain from most places. A small fraction of trails don't have direct access to all other mountain areas.
8
It's easy to get to and from most mountain areas. A few minor areas aren't directly accessible from all other parts of the resort or may be hard to find.
7
It's reasonably simple to get between most major mountain areas. A few areas require catwalks or traverses to get to or from or are hard to find. Some areas require multiple direct lift rides to travel between.
6
It's reasonably simple to get between many major mountain areas, but some areas require more effort due to poor signage, indirect lifts, or catwalks.
5
Some mountain areas are easy to navigate while others require more effort due to poor signage, indirect lifts, or catwalks.
4
Some mountain areas are easy to get between, but navigating many major areas can be confusing. Some major trails may suffer from poor signage or require catwalks.
3
It can take multiple lifts or be notably confusing to get between major resort areas. Many resort areas suffer from indirect trail routes, poor signage, or multiple catwalks.
2
It takes a substantial amount of effort and multiple indirect lifts to get between resort areas with little enjoyable terrain in between. Expect to occasionally get lost.
1
Expect to regularly get lost at this resort due to poor signage and lift placement. Getting between mountain areas requires notable effort and extremely unenjoyable terrain.
0
It's impossible to get around this resort. You will likely get lost or spend your whole day trying to get from one place to another.
5
Challenge

Criteria Breakdown
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10
The resort boasts truly extreme terrain across several prominent areas. Any double blacks should not be attempted, even by experts, without using extreme caution.
9
Select resort areas boast some of the most challenging runs in the world. The most challenging terrain should not be attempted, even by experts, without using extreme caution.
8
The mountain boasts extremely demanding terrain with sustained pitches, cliffs, drop-ins, and/or tight turns.
7
The mountain offers a range of very steep, ungroomed terrain with features like cliffs, drop-ins, or tight turns.
6
The mountain offers a range of steep, difficult terrain, with expert features like cliffs in some places.
5
The mountain offers some fairly steep groomed and ungroomed runs.
4
The mountain offers some steep runs but very little ungroomed terrain.
3
The mountain primarily offers groomed terrain with moderate pitches.
2
The mountain offers mostly gently-sloped terrain.
1
None of the mountain's terrain is more difficult than a typical bunny hill.
0
The mountain is completely flat.
7
Mountain Aesthetic

Criteria Breakdown
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10
The resort offers one-of-a-kind views, terrain, isolation, and vibes. You probably won't find a resort that feels like this again in your lifetime.
9
The resort offers unique terrain, views, and isolation that you'll rarely find anywhere else.
8
The resort clearly distinguishes itself with class-leading views, terrain, and isolation.
7
The resort feels unique, with high-quality views, terrain, and isolation across the footprint.
6
The resort doesn't boast the same unique terrain as some competing resorts but offers excellent views and isolation in many areas.
5
The resort offers some cool terrain and great views and isolation in some areas. Some areas may feel commercialized or built-up.
4
The resort offers decently cool terrain, nice views, or pockets of isolation in places. Major areas may feel commercialized or built-up.
3
The resort either feels commercialized or built-up around more than half the resort or offers only moderately interesting terrain, views and isolation.
2
The resort either feels commercialized or built-up in most areas or offers only mildly interesting terrain, views or isolation.
1
The resort barely feels like a mountain, with intense commercialization and very little in the way of views, terrain, or isolation.
0
The resort is completely flat or indoors.
4
Good To Know
Aprés-ski:
Limited
On-site Lodging:
Yes
Nearest City:
Pass Affiliation:
Ikon Pass
Epic [Backend]
Ikon [Backend]
Mountain Collective [Backend]
Other [Backend]
Recommended Ability:
From
Beginner
To
Advanced
Beginner [Backend]
Intermediate [Backend]
Advanced [Backend]
Expert [Backend]
Extreme [Backend]
Pros
- Outstanding guest services
- Top-tier mountain facilities and infrastructure
- Crowd-mitigating cap on ticket sales
Pro Con Item [Backend]
Cons
- Built-up, artificial mountain aesthetic
- Less diverse terrain than other Utah resorts, especially for experts
- Inconvenient navigation experience
- Ban on snowboarders
Pro Con Item [Backend]
Mountain Stats
2026
acres
Skiable Footprint
2026
acres
Total Footprint
96
%
Lift-Serviced Terrain
9570
ft
Top Elevation
3000
ft
Vertical Drop
21
Lifts
110
Trails
24
%
Beginner
40
%
Intermediate
36
%
Advanced/Expert
Comprehensive Review
Long renowned for its guest services and ritzy slopeside lodging—and ban on snowboarders—Deer Valley has been a go-to option among top-priced ski resorts for years. Although it offers terrain for all abilities and impressive mountain infrastructure, the resort appeals to a certain crowd and isn’t for everyone.
Deer Valley offers relatively gentle terrain for Utah. The terrain here mainly consists of beginner-to-intermediate groomers, and most mountain areas have at least one green trail. However, the bunny slope is small, and aggressive traffic from harder terrain filters into some greens. Double-blue trails tend to be relatively steep for intermediates, but they’re generally groomed. Many black trails receive regular grooming as well.
While Deer Valley doesn’t offer the same quantity of difficult, ungroomed terrain as competing resorts, the mountain does offer a decent mix of steep mogul runs and glades. Notably, some glade runs consist of carvable, easy-to-navigate aspen tree terrain. There are a few bowl-ish areas at the highest elevations, but the above-treeline terrain doesn’t last for long. Besides a few formidably steep drop-ins along the Daly Chutes, there’s very little expert terrain here.
Due to Deer Valley’s layout, navigating the mountain can be challenging at times. Getting up the mountain isn’t bad, but in many cases, you’ll have to take at least one lift to get down from higher to lower elevation areas. While the resort has a 3000’ vertical drop, it’s not possible to ski it directly; in fact, you need to take 3 lifts to get from the highest elevation Empire area to the lowest elevation Jordanelle base. The Ruby Express, which provides the only exit access from Empire and Lady Morgan, can get backed up in the late afternoon. Make sure to stay cognizant of where you need to be at the end of the day.
But Deer Valley does its part to keep things moving. The resort employs clear signage that makes staying on the right path easy. Nearly every part of the resort sees high-speed lift service, and many areas can be reached through multiple lift options. It’s also easy to lap most runs.
The resort caps ticket sales each day, which helps mitigate excess crowding. However, this cap can fluctuate, and lines have somewhat increased since the resort started accepting the Ikon Pass. If you plan on coming here, we recommend buying your tickets ahead of time. It’s important to note that if you’re using Ikon days, you have to call ahead to reserve a spot on the mountain to guarantee yourself access.
At Deer Valley, you’ll find the light, dry snow that Utah resorts are known for. However, those expecting constant powder may be slightly disappointed; the resort doesn’t see nearly as much accumulation as nearby Alta and Snowbird. Some argue that the ban on snowboarders improves the snow quality, but we haven’t noticed much of an impact. The resort employs extensive snowmaking operations to ensure a dependable base.
As a result of Deer Valley’s long vertical drop, lower mountain areas see significantly more variable conditions than upper. Luckily, the gondola from the low-elevation Jordanelle base allows for downloading in the event of poor conditions, and the existence of multiple higher elevation base areas allows you to skip the lowest elevation parts of the resort entirely.
Not everyone will love the mountain aesthetic at Deer Valley. The vast majority of the mountain feels built up and artificial; roads and condos are present even in some higher elevation runs. These developments are private property, causing some terrain access restrictions across the resort. While most of these areas are cat tracks and not worth skiing, going outside the bounds of the resort counts as a misdemeanor. You’ll need to get to the top of Bald Mountain or Empire for the only truly isolated terrain at the resort.
On the plus side, the resort offers fantastic views of some neighboring peaks—including those at nearby Park City—and the Jordanelle Reservoir below. In addition, many will love the looks of the widely spaced, light-tan aspen trees.
Deer Valley’s defining characteristic is its hospitality. You’ll find staff ready to carry your gear around at multiple base areas, and the mountain offers complimentary overnight ski storage for up to seven days. The resort offers multiple mid-mountain lodges with high quality but expensive dining options; you can store your skis with the staff during the day at many of these. If you get cold after a long chairlift ride, you can warm up in cabins at the top of Flagstaff and Bald Mountains.
Lodging
Deer Valley offers a number of slopeside accommodations in base and mid-mountain areas, including the world-renowned Stein Eriksen Lodge and a St. Regis with a funicular. All are upscale but expensive; many offer ski valet services. There are cheaper options in nearby Park City, but if you’re staying there, you might as well ski at Park City Resort instead (the two resorts are on separate passes so splitting your days between the two isn’t easy).
Apres-ski
Deer Valley suffers from a limited apres-ski and nightlife scene. Nice but expensive apres-ski options can be found in some slopeside hotels. Outside of these, there are really no bars here; Park City offers the closest nightlife opportunities.
Verdict
Deer Valley is for those who want to be pampered on a ski vacation, not for those who want the biggest and best terrain. Lift ticket prices are as high as $200 a day, and for the same or less money, you can hit other resorts with better snow, more acreage, or more diverse terrain. But for those with an Ikon Pass, Deer Valley may make sense as a family-friendly trip for a few days.
NOTE:Mountain Score criteria for this resort were adjustedon October 12, 2021andApril 11, 2021.
Best Winter Wonderland Getaway
The resort is a true winter wonderland, with stunning scenery and fantastic skiing conditions. The après-ski activities were a blast, and the staff went out of their way to ensure everything ran smoothly. I especially enjoyed the variety of trails and the relaxing atmosphere after a day on the slopes.
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