The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Why U.S. Snowfall Hit Record Lows But Skier Visits Did Not

It's probably not just that we're getting better at counting.

Stuart Winchester's avatar
Stuart Winchester
Jun 05, 2026
∙ Paid

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National Ski Areas Association (NSAA) skier visit records stretch back 48 years, to winter 1978-79. This past winter’s 52.9 million skier visits rank 32nd over that nearly half-century (annual rankings in black):

Data source: NSAA. Best viewed on a computer machine.

That’s not great, especially following six consecutive top-10 winters (excluding the truncated 2019-20 campaign).

But here is a more alarming data point: nationwide average ski area snowfall crashed to historic lows in winter 2025-26. The NSAA’s snow stats only date to winter 1991-92, but this past season’s 112 inches lands dead last over that 35-year period, a full 11 percentage points below the previous low of 126 inches (annual rankings in black):

Data source: NSAA.

Truncating the skier visit timeline to match the snowfall records reveals an interesting nuance: while 2025-26 ranks as the worst snowfall season in at least 35 years, it only clocks in as the sixth-lowest for skier visits:

This past winter’s 52.6 million skier visits would have finished as a pretty average season in the 1990s, even with those winters’ substantially higher snowfall totals:

Below the paid subscriber jump: more Dumb Charts, a regional survey shows how bad it was out West, counting is hard, snowmaking is good, why the Ikon Pass is skiing’s Boy Scout badge, and more. Thank you for supporting independent ski journalism.

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