Magic Mountain, Vermont Debuts Black Line Quad After Nearly Five Years of Construction
Updated:
October 11, 2024

EDIT 2/24/2024:Updated language to reflect that Magic did not install the Black Line lift without contractor assistance.
After years of anticipation, Vermont’sMagic Mountainfinallydebuted its Black Line Quad lift on Thursday. The newly-operational lift extends from the Magic Mountain base all the way to the summit, running adjacent to the two-person Red Chair. With the Black Line’s installation, Magic has tripled its base-to-summit uphill capacity.
The Black Line lift had been under construction since 2019, marking nearly five years from construction start to finish. Unlike higher-end ski resorts with more generous budgets, Magic chose to install the lift without the same quality of outside assistance—which, combined with COVID, resulted in several hiccups that contributed to the protracted installation timeline.
The new quad is the successor to the old three-person Black Chair, which held down service in the same lift line for nearly six decades before its retirement in 2019. From 2019 until earlier this week, the Red Chair was the only lift serving Magic’s summit.
To honor the Black Line Quad’s debut, Magic plansa ribbon-cutting ceremonythis weekend at 10am, which will correspond with its already-scheduled Winterfest celebration.
Our Take
Now that the Black Line Quad is finally operational, the lift will bring considerable relief for this off-the-beaten-path southern Vermont mountain.
Magic’s uphill capacity has been notably limited in recent years, with only the Red chair, a fixed-grip double, servicing the resort summit. The resort has always aimed to offer limited lift lines, but due to the throughput constraints, the resort has chosen to limit lift ticket sales during peak times. Now that the Black Line chair has tripled capacity to the summit, Magic has been freed up to offer daily access to more guests.
The Black Line lift is a fixed-grip quad, meaning that Magic will continue to maintain 100% slow lift service, unlike nearly all of its southern Vermont competitors. The quad’s 11-minute ride time, about equal to the neighboring Red Chair, is not exactly going to set any records. But unlike the other mountains in this part of Vermont, Magic tends to offer an advanced and expert-oriented footprint, with ungroomed trails and fairly liberal terrain openings that make for a unique experience this far south in the state. As a result, the speed of its lifts isn’t exactly Magic’s attracting factor—and likely won’t be a huge deal to its target demographic.
Considering a ski trip to Magic this year? Check out our fullVermont andEast Coastrankings, as well as our comprehensiveMagic Mountain review.Additionally, you can check out our 2023-24 Vermont rankings in video form below.
Recent Articles

Salt Lake City Has Been Selected for the 2034 Olympics. Here Are the Ski Resort Upgrades to Expect.
Salt Lake City is set to host the Winter Olympics for the second time in the 21st century. We cover the likely host mountains and capital investments to expect over the next decade.
Analysis
News
Deal
Announcement
Video
Investigative Journalism
August 28, 2024
Utah
Park City
Deer Valley
Snowbasin
Olympics

Ikon Pass Adds Sierra-at-Tahoe for 2024-25 Season
Sierra-at-Tahoe will become the second Tahoe destination—and the first on the south side of the lake—to join the Ikon Pass starting this winter.
Analysis
News
Deal
Announcement
Video
Investigative Journalism
August 27, 2024
West Coast
Lake Tahoe
Ikon Pass
California
Cali Pass
No results found...