Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, Wyoming Ski Report
If you’re daydreaming about carving up Jackson Hole right now, hit pause on waxing your skis—because the mountain has officially switched into summer mode and the “snow report” is more about wildflowers, bike trails, and tram rides than face shots. Jackson Hole Mountain Resort’s winter season has ended and the resort is operating on its summer schedule, with the Aerial Tram and other lifts spinning for sightseeing, hiking, and downhill biking rather than skiing. The official mountain report is now focused on summer operations, with no alpine ski terrain open and no groomed runs, patrol coverage, or avalanche control for lift-accessed skiing or riding. That also means there are no current readings for base or summit snow depth, no new snowfall in the last 24 or 48 hours, and no count of open ski lifts or trails in the usual winter sense, because the ski area is closed for the season and transitioning into full summer activities. Up high in the Tetons, you can still expect lingering snowfields on north-facing slopes and in high alpine zones, but these are in full spring–summer melt mode. Coverage will be highly variable: firm in the morning, softening quickly into slushy, runneled snow by midday, with exposed rocks, open creeks, and the odd hidden hole where the snow has melted from underneath. Think mountaineering or ski-touring conditions for experts, not resort laps for cruisers. Any off-piste travel on skis or splitboards now is 100% backcountry, which means no marked hazards, no avalanche mitigation, and a full self-reliance mindset if you go hunting for truly last-gasp turns. Weather-wise, Jackson Hole is sitting in typical early-summer pattern territory: cool to mild mornings, pleasantly warm afternoons down in the valley, and significantly cooler temps at elevation. Expect a big temperature gradient between Teton Village and the high ridgelines, with the possibility of quick-building afternoon showers or thunderstorms that can drop visibility, slick up rocks and lingering snow patches, and kick up gusty winds around the upper tram. Pack like a mountain person, not a beach tourist—layers, a shell, sun protection, and plenty of water. Since the resort snow stake is no longer the star of the show, here’s the “think like a local” take on conditions. If you want to slide on snow, your window is dawn patrol missions on remaining high-elevation snowfields with tech bindings and a good attitude about walking on dirt. Snow quality will be refrozen and firm early, transitioning to classic manky slush as soon as the sun gets on it. Rock skis only, and only if you’ve got the experience and gear for full-on backcountry travel. For everyone else who loves sliding, Jackson has pivoted toward bikes and boards with wheels, not edges: bike park laps off Teewinot and Sweetwater once they open for the summer schedule, hiking off Bridger and tram-accessed sightseeing, and a serious trail-running and hiking lineup as the snow line retreats. From a pure “season stats” perspective, Jackson Hole came out of winter with a strong snow year, with over two hundred inches up top and deep coverage that kept the mountain riding well into spring, but those numbers are now history, not a live snow report. What matters now is that meltwater is charging the rivers for rafting, wildflowers are starting to pop, and locals are trading avalanche forecasts for weather radars and trail reports. For visitors rolling into Teton Village with ski bags still in the car, the key notice is this: there is no lift-served skiing or snowboarding right now, and the resort is in summer operations. If you’re determined to chase snow in early summer, talk to local shops and guides about current high-alpine conditions, start painfully early, and treat any remaining snow as a mountaineering objective, not a casual groomer day. Otherwise, embrace the season flip: ride the tram in a T-shirt, scope your favorite winter lines from the deck at Piste, dream about next year’s powder, and enjoy the weirdly satisfying feeling of seeing a world-class ski hill wearing its summer colors. For great deals check out https://amzn.to/4nidg0P
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