How much will you pay for a season pass at your local ski resort? Or will you just earn your turns in the backcountry?
Here
in Jackson Hole, the mountain management seems to think that I can
afford $1625 (2007) for an
unlimited season pass. As a social worker
for the past 5 years, there is essentially no chance that I would ever
have that kind of money. I've thought about this a lot, and am very
frustrated with the way that the resort treats local skiers.
The
only justification that makes sense to me is that the resort needs to
provide an incentive for people to actually work at the mountain. Since
they pay all of $7/hour, there is no financial incentive to bump chairs
or sell tickets. The first year that I worked at the mountain, I had to
borrow several thousand dollars from my parents just to make rent and
feed myself. (Luckily my parents were supportive and that was an
option! Thanks M and D) This sort of compensation doesn't exactly make
for loyal employees. So anyway, the mountain tries to convince newbies
and foreigners that working at the mountain is the only way that they
will be able to have a full season pass.
It still doesn't
fully make sense to me though. How can little mom and pop resorts all
over the country find workers, pay them well and still offer dirt cheap
passes/lift tickets?
Have you heard about the new Epic Pass for
Vail Resorts? It makes me pretty jealous and I wish that resorts like
Aspen and Jackson could follow suite. Read below for info. If anyone
has insight into the economics of ski resorts, please comment below! I
also would be interested to know how much you pay and if you think it's
a good value...
Pass warsby Damien Williamson, Aspen Daily News Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
As
snow continues to pile up on soon-to-be-closed ski resorts throughout
the nation and the end of a record-breaking season looms ever closer,
several ski areas across the state are preparing to set new records
next year by introducing season passes that not only offer unparalleled
access to multiple mountains, but are doing so with increasingly
cheaper price tags.
Vail Resorts announced in March that it will
offer the new Epic Pass next season, which will provide unrestricted
access to all five of its mountains - Vail, Beaver Creek, Breckenridge,
Keystone and Heavenly Mountain on the California-Nevada border - for
$579, a significant savings over the 2007-2008 season's $1,849
unrestricted pass price. And Intrawest, which owns Copper Mountain,
Winter Park Ski Resort and officially acquired Steamboat Springs Ski
Resort in early 2007, recently announced a nearly 10 percent price drop
on its Rocky Mountain Super Pass, offering unlimited access to Copper
and Winter Park, as well as six unrestricted days at Steamboat.
Meanwhile,
Aspen Skiing Co. officials don't anticipate any significant changes to
its pass pricing structure, adding that while these passes are an
"interesting business plan," it's not "something we're interested in
doing."
But for Vail Resorts and Intrawest, the new passes and
reduced prices stem from a desire to both get skiers already skiing at
their resorts to ski more often, and to provide increased flexibility
to those interested in skiing at the company's sister mountains.
"We
really looked at the success of the Colorado Pass and the Summit Pass
and saw just how much our Front Range skiers love the ability to buy
those products," said Vail Resorts CEO Rob Katz. "So we really wanted
to offer something similar for our destination market to really get
people to think of skiing as a season-long activity."
Katz said
that lots of skiers head to Vail around the holidays, and that this new
pass will hopefully encourage them to come back to Vail for another
trip later in the year.
"The point of the pass isn't just to
grab new skiers," he added. "We're trying to take our existing loyal
customer base and get them to both commit to our resort earlier, and to
come back multiple times."
Heidi Thomsen, communications
director for Steamboat Springs, said that once Intrawest acquired
Steamboat in March 2007, it was "natural for the company to come up
with some type of pass that would connect Steamboat with the two Summit
County ski resorts."
"It's just an amazing advantage for the
customers at all three resorts to have access to three world-class
mountains within a few hours of each other," she said of the $439 Rocky
Mountain Super Pass Plus. "Overall, we're just excited to be a part of
a company that can offer so many options to its customers."
In
addition to the Super Pass Plus, Intrawest will also offer a Rocky
Mountain Ultimate Pass for $1,054, giving unrestricted access to all
8,493 acres of the three mountains, as well as a free child (for those
between the ages of 6 and 12) ultimate pass with the purchase of every
adult pass.
"Each of the resorts offers something different,"
said Lauren Pelletreau, Copper Mountain's spokesperson. "Steamboat has
the champagne powder, Winter Park is a true family resort with great
bump skiing and they're building up their base village, and Copper has
terrain parks and 2,400 acres of naturally divided terrain. So with
these passes, we're really trying to make sure our guests are getting
the type of skiing they are looking for, when they're looking for it."
Each
of the three companies - SkiCo, Vail Resorts and Intrawest - say they
look at national trends, but are hesitant to look directly at what
other resorts are doing when determining pass and lift ticket prices.
"We
look at the overall market place," said Copper's Pelletreau. "We try to
make products and passes available to our skiers and riders that we
think they'll use at a price we think they'll buy. So I'd say we listen
to our guests more than we listen to other resorts."
"We think
we offer a really great product," said SkiCo spokesman Jeff Hanle, "and
we're not trying to do what anyone else is doing. We don't model
ourselves after Vail Resorts or Intrawest or any of the resorts under
those companies."
Vail Resorts and Intrawest announced their new
passes and reduced prices less than two months after independent ski
area research company, Snow24, released its 2008 World Lift Ticket
Price Report, which once again identified the United States as having
the most expensive high season, non-discounted lift tickets in the
world. The survey looked at more than 550 ski areas in 40 countries and
found that the average U.S. six-day lift ticket price was $365.73,
while the average price for a six-day ticket for the rest of the world
was $258.
Vail was singled out as having the most expensive peak season six-day lift ticket at $552.
But, according to report editor Patrick Thorne, it is important to note that few people actually pay these maximum prices.
"While
the U.S. resort come out as the world's most expensive on paper," he
said, "the reality is that resorts like Vail have the most
sophisticated pricing models with dozens of price combinations and many
ways to pay much less. A recent report in the Vail Daily News said that
whilst Vail had the most expensive day ticket of $92, in reality last
winter it averaged $47 per day ticket sold. In other parts of the world
prices are often set at one rate all winter, so though you may get a
better price at the ticket window in high season, you're less likely to
make much of a saving any time."
And passes like Vail's Epic Pass and Intrawest's Rocky Mountain Super Pass Plus are perfect examples of this.
Both
SkiCo and Intrawest are privately held companies and, as such, do not
release specific information on the number of passes purchased or the
percentage of revenue brought in from season passes versus that of
single- and multi-day lift tickets. While Vail Mountain is publicly
held, Vail Resorts spokeswoman Kelly Ladyga said that information had
yet to be compiled for the season.
damien@aspendailynews.com
Now's the time to get a ski passBY MILES BLUMHARDT
MilesBlumhardt@coloradoan.com
This year's incredible ski season isn't even over and already it's time to start thinking of next season.
Here's a look at some of the preseason pass bargains for next season:
>
Arapahoe Basin Bonus Pass: $379 for season pass to A-Basin the rest of
this year and next plus five non-transferable ski days at Keystone or
Breckenridge. One of those five ski days can be used at Vail or Beaver
Creek. Information:
www.arapahoebasin.com> Summit Pass: $399
for unlimited skiing/riding at Breckenridge, Keystone and Arapahoe
Basin. Deadline is May 4. Passes available at REI, 4025 S. College Ave.
Information:
www.snow.com> Colorado Pass: $439 for
unlimited skiing/riding at Breckenridge, Keystone and Arapahoe Basin
and 10 days at Vail and Beaver Creek. Deadline is May 4. Passes
available at REI, 4025 S. College Ave. Information:
www.snow.com>
Epic Season Pass: $579 for unlimited skiing/riding at Vail, Beaver
Creek, Breckenridge, Keystone and Arapahoe Basin. Passes available at
REI, 4025 S. College Ave. Deadline is May 4. Information:
www.snow.com> The Rocky Mountain Super Pass: $399 for
unlimited skiing/riding at Winter Park and Copper Mountain. Information
www.passwagon.com
> Rocky Mountain Super Pass Plus: $439 for
unlimited skiing/riding to Winter Park and Copper Mountain and six days
at Steamboat. Information:
www.passwagon.com> Rocky Mountain
Ultimate Pass: $1,054 for unlimited skiing/riding at Steamboat, Winter
Park and Copper Mountain, plus a free child (ages 6-12) Ultimate Pass
with each adult Rocky Mountain Ultimate Pass purchase. Information:
www.steamboat.com/seasonpassThat's Our Opinion. What's Yours?