Big Sky in Late May: Why Your Skis Can Wait Until Winter
If you’re wondering whether it’s worth pointing your tips toward Big Sky right now, here’s the lowdown, local style. First, a reality check: by late May Big Sky’s winter season is normally wrapped up, with lifts closed to the public and the mountain shifting into summer mode. That means no regular lift-served skiing or riding at the moment, and any snow up high is more of a scenic backdrop (or a target for the truly determined ski-tourer) than a resort product.
Because the ski area is closed, Big Sky is no longer posting an active daily snow report with base and summit depths, new snow in the last 24 or 48 hours, or open lift and trail counts. The last official winter numbers are frozen in time at season close, and on-mountain operations like grooming, avalanche control, and patrolled off-piste access have shut down until next winter. From a user point of view, that translates to zero open lifts, zero open trails, and no official season-total ticker that’s still being updated. The season-total snowfall you’ll see on various snow stats sites right now will be end-of-season figures, not changing day to day.
Weather-wise, think spring-into-summer in the Madison Range rather than midwinter pow. Around Big Sky Village, daytime temperatures are generally running cool-to-mild, with chilly mornings and evenings and a mix of sun, passing clouds, and the occasional mountain shower or afternoon thunderstorm as we move deeper into the warm season pattern. Up high on Lone Peak, it’s colder and windier, and you can still expect patches or fields of lingering snow on north-facing slopes and shaded gullies, but that snow is going through daily freeze–thaw cycles. For anyone eyeing human-powered turns, that means firm, refrozen “coral reef” early, softening into heavy slush by late morning or midday if the sun is out. There’s no grooming, so everything is backcountry-style variable: crust, mank, runnels, and leftover avalanche debris here and there.
With the resort closed, there is no official off-piste or avalanche mitigation happening on the ski terrain itself. From a conditions standpoint, you have to treat anything beyond low-elevation hiking trails as true backcountry: unstable snow where it still lingers, moats around rocks and trees, open creeks, and rapidly changing surfaces as the sun works the pack. If you do go touring near the area boundaries, you’re entirely on your own program. Check the regional avalanche center’s spring updates, carry proper gear, and adopt full backcountry decision-making; don’t expect ski patrol, ropes, or hazard signs to guide you.
The next several days for Big Sky look like a pretty classic shoulder-season blend: relatively mild temperatures around the base area, cooler and breezier on the upper mountain, with a mix of sunny periods and some unsettled spells that may bring light rain lower down and a dusting of new snow only on the highest terrain if a cooler system sneaks through. That kind of weather is better for hiking boots and bikes than for building a fresh powder stash. Any new snow up high is likely to be thin, wind-affected, and short-lived, mostly just refreshing the alpine scenery.
From a skier or rider’s perspective, the most relevant info right now is logistical. Lifts are closed for skiing, mountain operations are transitioning to summer activities like scenic lift rides and hiking when they open on the summer schedule, and typical winter services such as rental shops, ski school, and day lodges are either closed or retooling for summer. If you’re coming to Big Sky in the near term, plan on bringing your trail shoes instead of your ski boots, and check Big Sky Resort’s official site or guest services for the exact summer lift schedule and any special notices, such as trail closures due to lingering snow, construction, or wildlife activity.
So if you’ve got skis on the brain, think of Big Sky right now as the mountain catching its breath between a long winter and a busy summer. The snow that’s left is for the adventurous and self-sufficient, not for casual resort laps. For lift-served pow, you’ll want to start looking south or overseas. But if you’re happy to trade chairlifts for wildflowers and singletrack, Big Sky is shifting into a pretty fun season of its own.
For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P