Follow the Lifts: Ski Town Real Estate and the Next Wave of Resort Investment

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Undoubtably, a new chairlift is a major skier convenience upgrade—more laps, less lift-line limbo.

In ski town real estate, lift projects can provide context for understanding resort growth and buyer interest. They can point to where a resort is investing, where skier traffic may shift, which base areas may become more desirable, and how confident a mountain operator is in the future of its destination.

The 2026 lift construction season offers a useful lens for watching those changes.

According to LiftBlog’s 2026 New Lifts tracker, the upcoming construction season includes new and replacement lifts across the United States and Canada, from high-speed chairlifts and gondolas to terrain-access lifts and base-area improvements. In core Western markets, several projects are especially relevant: in Utah—Powder Mountain’s new DMI Lift, Sundown replacement, and future beginner lift Doodle, as well as Park City’s ongoing Canyons Village access improvements, and Sun Valley’s planned Lookout Express and Christmas lift upgrades in Idaho.

For ski town real estate, that list offers more than a preview of next season’s upgrades. It gives buyers another way to see where resorts are investing capital, improving skier flow, and reshaping the mountain experience.

Powder Mountain—New Lifts Define Ski Access

Resort infrastructure is one of the clearest indicators of a mountain’s long-term direction.

When a resort replaces an aging chairlift, adds a gondola, improves a beginner area, expands terrain, or creates a stronger base-to-mountain connection, it is making a statement about its future. These projects are expensive, complex, and often years in the making. They require planning, approvals, capital, construction access, and confidence that the investment will improve the guest experience.

Powder Mountain is a timely Utah example. Located in Eden, Utah, the resort’s new DMI Lift is expected to serve more than 1,000 acres of steep terrain in the Wolf Creek Canyon zone, while the Sundown replacement is designed to modernize access from one of the resort’s key public base areas. Powder Mountain is also planning the future Doodle Lift, a beginner-focused lift intended to support skier progression and create a more approachable learning environment. At the same time, the planned retirement of the Sunrise Poma after the 2026/27 season shows how resort access is becoming more defined, with public access to Cobabe Canyon shifting to hike-to access while homeowners continue to reach the area through a separate private lift connection.

Together, these projects show a resort refining multiple parts of the mountain experience: advanced terrain, beginner progression, public base access, and private-side connectivity.

Park City’s Canyons Village—New Gondola And Arrival Improvements

Park City offers a different kind of infrastructure example. While Powder Mountain’s updates include terrain expansion and more defined public-private access, Park City’s ongoing Canyons Village improvements are focused on arrival, circulation, and base-area convenience.

Park City Mountain base area with chairlifts, ski runs, and village buildings in winter.
Image courtesy of Benjamin R via Unsplash

The PCMR’s Canyons Village work includes construction on the final phase of the parking structure and a new 10-person gondola replacing the Cabriolet Lift. Together, these improvements are designed to make it easier for guests to move from parking and the lower village into the Canyons Village Forum and on toward the mountain.

This type of project improves the daily use experience. A smoother arrival, better connection between parking and the village, and more efficient movement through the base area can strengthen the appeal of nearby condos, townhomes, lodging, restaurants, and rental properties. It may not be as dramatic as opening new terrain, but convenience is one of the quiet forces that shapes how owners and guests experience a resort community.

Sun Valley—Bald Mountain Lift Upgrades

Sun Valley’s upgrades show how established resorts continue to refine the mountain experience.

Snow-covered ski terrain with evergreen trees and sweeping mountain views under a blue sky.
Image courtesy of Drew Bernard via Unsplash

Its planned Lookout Express and Christmas lift replacements on Bald Mountain are focused on reliability, uphill capacity, and continued modernization of an already established destination. These upgrades improve the core ski experience at one of the West’s most iconic resorts. For buyers, that kind of investment reinforces confidence in a mature market, showing that even legacy destinations are continuing to refine access, reduce friction, and protect the quality of the mountain experience that supports long-term real estate demand.

What New Lifts Reveal About a Resort Market

These projects are different in terrain, resort identity, and buyer profile, but the pattern is similar: lift investment can shape how a resort functions, where skiers spend time, and how buyers understand the long-term direction of a mountain community.

A new lift can mean shorter lines, easier laps, and more time riding the mountain. It may also show where a resort is putting capital, attention, and long-term confidence. Those details help buyers look beyond the trail map and better understand the mountain community they are buying into.

Two skiers celebrating on a sunny mountain slope with snowy terrain in the background.
Image courtesy Eirik Uhlen via Unsplash

Explore our Ski Town Finder to search for and compare mountain communities across the West by lifestyle, resort access, amenities, and real estate fit.

Look Beyond the Trail Map

Thinking about buying or selling in a ski town? Connect with Mountain Luxury for local insight into resort investment, lift access, mountain lifestyle, and real estate opportunities across Utah and the West. Our team can help you understand how each resort community fits your goals.

Luxury Is In The Details — Let's Talk

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