North American ski resorts have spent $800 million since 2019 on lift systems, lodging, and village infrastructure that finally answer the European question. Vail Resorts, Alterra Mountain Company, and independent operators in Utah and Colorado now field terrain, vertical drop, and après-ski density that keep single-family offices from reflexively booking Courchevel.
The shift follows sustained capital deployment. Vail Resorts allocated $315 million in lift replacements and high-speed gondola installations across Vail, Beaver Creek, and Park City between 2020 and 2023. Alterra deployed $180 million at Deer Valley, Steamboat, and Palisades Tahoe over the same window. Independent resort Jackson Hole Mountain Resort completed a $38 million Sweetwater Gondola in 2021, cutting mid-mountain transit from 18 minutes to six. These are not incremental upgrades. They are parity moves that eliminate the operational gap European resorts have held since the 1980s.
The hospitality layer matters as much as the lifts. Deer Valley's $500 million East Village expansion, opening December 2024, adds 316 rooms across three hotels, 103,000 square feet of commercial space, and 2,500 acres of new terrain. The St. Regis Deer Valley already anchors the upper bracket at $2,400 per night in peak season. East Village pushes inventory into constrained supply windows when European alternatives required transatlantic positioning. Meanwhile, Vail's Ever Vail development delivered 292 residences starting at $2.1 million in 2022, capturing wealth that previously flowed to Verbier or Zermatt.
Accessibility tilts the equation further. Denver International sits 120 minutes from six major resorts. Salt Lake City International sits 45 minutes from four. Private aviation operators report European ski routing requires London or Geneva positioning, then helicopter or two-hour ground transfers. North American resorts now offer comparable verticality—Jackson Hole runs 4,139 feet, Snowbird 3,240 feet—without the transit friction. For family offices running tight travel schedules, the math shifted.
The competitive repositioning shows in booking data. Virtuoso, the luxury travel network handling $37 billion in annual transactions, reports North American ski resort bookings up 22 percent year-over-year for winter 2024-2025, while European Alps bookings rose 11 percent. The gap closed by half in two seasons. Meanwhile, private jet positioning to Aspen, Jackson, and Park City rose 18 percent winter-over-winter, per flight-tracking aggregator Colibri Aircraft.
European operators are not standing still. Club Med opened a $65 million Val Thorens property in December 2023. Aman launched its third Alps location in Courchevel in 2022 at rates exceeding $3,000 per night. But North American resorts now compete on experience density, not just scenery. When a family office can position from New York to Deer Valley in four hours private, access 2,500 acres of uncrowded terrain, and return to an East Coast dinner the same week, the European default weakens.
Operators and allocators should watch Q1 2025 booking velocity at newly expanded North American properties, particularly Deer Valley East Village and any Alterra announcements around Mammoth or Palisades lodging. European resorts will likely respond with rate discipline or partnership announcements targeting North American wealth managers. Private aviation utilization to Rocky Mountain and Wasatch corridors will signal whether the shift holds through 2025-2026 winter seasons.
The North American ski product is no longer the fallback. It is the comp set, and the capital deployment that made it possible is already deployed.