Vail Resorts


Vail Resorts, Inc. is an American mountain resort company headquartered in Broomfield, Colorado. The company is divided among divisions that own and operate 42 mountain resorts in four countries, along with hotels, lodging, condominiums, and golf courses that constitute property real estate holdings.

History

Vail Resorts was founded as Vail Associates Ltd. by Pete Seibert and Earl Eaton in the early 1960s. Eaton, a lifelong resident, led Seibert to the area in March 1957. They both became ski patrol guides at Aspen, Colorado, when they shared their dream of finding the "next great ski mountain." Seibert set off to secure financing, and Eaton engineered the early lifts. Their Vail ski resort opened in 1962. George N. Gillett Jr. purchased Vail Associates in 1985, but the company veered toward bankruptcy by 1991.
In 1992 Vail Associates was acquired by Apollo Ski Partners, a new arm of the private equity firm Apollo Global Management led by billionaire Leon Black. The new ownership led Vail Resorts public in 1997.
In 1996, Vail Resorts completed its first major acquisition with a $310 million purchase of Ralston Resorts, the owner of Keystone, Breckenridge, and Arapahoe Basin. This led to antitrust concerns, and Vail Resorts ultimately sold Arapahoe Basin to a third party due to a ruling from the Department of Justice.
In 2001, Vail Resorts acquired the hotel chain RockResorts.
Rob Katz, a former executive at Apollo, ran Vail Resorts as CEO until November 2021, when he was appointed executive chairperson of the board. Kirsten Lynch, the company's former chief marketing officer, then took over as CEO.
In June 2024, Vail Resorts reported lower-than-expected revenue during the February–April quarter due to a significantly warmer-than-anticipated winter across western North American resorts, with snowfall 28% lower than average. The company generated $1.28 billion in revenue during the quarter despite the stabilizing effect of its Epic Pass program, which allows customers to purchase a season pass for its North American resorts at a significant upfront cost. However, Vail's stock price has declined by 50% since its October 2021 peak of $360.

Declining sales and visitation (2024–2025)

In the 2024–25 season the company reported that in North America it sold 2% fewer Epic passes than the year prior, which is the first decline in pass sales the company has ever reported. The company attributed the decline to travel "normalization" after COVID and poor snowfall in some areas.
Visitation at Vail's North American resorts in the 2025 ski season, throughout February, March and April, were down by 7% year-over-year.
The outlook for the 2025–26 season is also lower. In early June the company announced fewer pass sales for the upcoming season compared to 2024–25.
In May 2025, CEO Kirsten Lynch resigned after the company had lost over half of its value during her tenure from 2021–2025. Robert Katz, who was formerly CEO for 16 years, returned to the leadership role.

Criticism

Some of Vail Resort's acquisitions have fueled anger among local residents. Locals complain that the Vail's pass structure caters to wealthy international pass holders and reduces access to nearby residents; additionally, residents have seen their cost of living increase following Vail's takeovers.
Vail Resorts’ visitors often complain about long lines. At times the long lines have been caused by ski patrol striking due to inflated property values and inadequate wages. A two-week strike at Park City, Utah around the Christmas holiday in 2024, led to increased wages for ski patrollers, and was followed by new contracts for employees at Keystone and Crested Butte, Colorado.
Local towns have also complained recently about their partnerships with Vail and its mountains. At Heavenly Mountain Resort, the town of South Lake Tahoe, California has voiced grievances of overflowing traffic, parking and negligent tourists, which drain from local resources outside from the town's tax authority. The town has increased its parking rates and capped snow plowing as a result, and hopes to annex parts of the ski mountain to access the tax base. Rural areas like Crested Butte are also finding Vail is unwilling to contribute to costs of airline transportation at regional airports, where resort owners had historically helped subsidize the transportation that helped deliver their customers.
A shareholder, Late Apex Partners, called for massive changes to the company—including a sweep of both the c-suite and board—after five years of significant underperformance by Vail.
All of the aforementioned items, among other things, have contributed to Vail’s poor reputation and earned the company the appellation “Evil Empire.”

Epic Pass price increases

Vail Resorts has increased the price of the all-access Epic Pass each year since 2021, amounting to a 34% hike over five years.
YearPrice% change
2021–22$783-
2022–23$841+7.4%
2023–24$909+8.1%
2024–25$982+8.0%
2025–26$1,051+7.0%

List of resorts

Vail Resorts operates 42 ski resorts in the United States, Canada, Australia and Switzerland including, notably, the Vail, Beaver Creek, Breckenridge, Keystone, and Crested Butte ski areas in Colorado, and Northstar California, Kirkwood Mountain Resort, and Heavenly Mountain Resort on the California-Nevada border. In British Columbia, Canada, they also acquired the largest ski resort in North America: Whistler Blackcomb. Vail Resorts offers a variety of multi-resort season passes under the Epic Pass program. The Epic Pass also has partnerships that allow access to several other resorts in the US, Canada, Japan, France, Switzerland, Austria, and Italy.
NameLocationNumber of liftsDate openedDate acquiredNotes
Afton Alps