At a Glance
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Mountains | 4: Aspen Mountain, Snowmass, Aspen Highlands, Buttermilk |
| Combined Skiable Acres | 5,700+ |
| Total Trails | 366 |
| Total Lifts | 41 (including 3 gondolas) |
| Average Annual Snowfall | 300+ inches |
| Vertical Drop | 4,406 ft (Snowmass — largest in the US) |
| Longest Run | Long Shot, Snowmass — 5.3 miles |
| Aspen Mountain Base | 7,945 ft / Summit: 11,212 ft |
| Snowmass Base | 8,104 ft / Summit: 12,510 ft |
| Aspen Highlands Base | 8,040 ft / Summit: 11,675 ft (hike-to: 12,392 ft) |
| Buttermilk Base | 7,870 ft / Summit: 9,900 ft |
| Drive Time from Denver | ~4 hours (200 miles) |
| Closest Airports | Aspen/Pitkin County Airport (ASE), 4 miles; Eagle County Regional (EGE), 70 miles |
| Town Elevation | 7,908 ft |
Getting There — What Drivers & Guests Should Know
From Denver
The drive from Denver to Aspen is approximately 200 miles and takes about four hours in good conditions — though winter weather and I-70 ski traffic can stretch that considerably. There are two routes:
Primary Route (Year-Round):
- I-70 West from Denver through the Eisenhower Tunnel
- Continue past Vail and through Glenwood Canyon — a stunning 12-mile stretch along the Colorado River, but one that closes periodically due to rockfall, mudslides, or severe weather
- Exit at Glenwood Springs onto CO Highway 82 South through the Roaring Fork Valley to Aspen (~42 miles, about 50 minutes)
Summer-Only Alternative:
- Independence Pass (CO 82 East) — This breathtaking route from Leadville crosses the Continental Divide at 12,095 feet. It's the most direct path from the I-70 corridor and one of Colorado's most spectacular drives. However, Independence Pass is closed from late October through late May due to snow. It is not a winter option.
Glenwood Canyon — What Drivers Need to Know
Glenwood Canyon is one of the most engineered stretches of highway in the US, with tunnels carved through granite walls along the Colorado River. It's scenic but can be problematic:
- Closures due to rockfall, debris flows, and severe weather happen several times per year, sometimes for hours or days
- No alternate route exists once you're in the canyon — if it closes, you wait
- Check COtrip.org before departure for real-time alerts on I-70 through Glenwood Canyon
- Cell service is spotty in the canyon — download offline maps as backup
Highway 82 — The Final Stretch
The 42-mile drive from Glenwood Springs to Aspen on Highway 82 is generally well-maintained but climbs steadily up the Roaring Fork Valley. Winter conditions include:
- Icy sections, particularly at higher elevations approaching Aspen
- Colorado's Traction Law applies — AWD/4WD with proper tires, or chains required
- Heavy traffic on weekends and holidays, especially around the Buttermilk and Snowmass Village turnoffs
Driver Tips for Arion Chauffeurs
- Timing is everything: Avoid Friday afternoon I-70 westbound traffic. Departing Denver before 7 AM or after 7 PM dramatically reduces travel time
- Fuel up before Glenwood Canyon — the Glenwood Springs area has the last easy fuel stop before Aspen
- Monitor Glenwood Canyon status obsessively during storm cycles; have a client communication plan if closures occur
- Parking in Aspen: The city operates paid parking garages (Rio Grande Garage is the most central). Street parking is metered and limited. For resort base access, use the Snowmass or Buttermilk lots
- In-town shuttles: RFTA (Roaring Fork Transportation Authority) operates free buses within Aspen and between Aspen, Snowmass, and the Roaring Fork Valley — useful context for advising guests
Aspen/Pitkin County Airport (ASE)
Just four miles from downtown Aspen, ASE offers the most convenient arrival but is a challenging mountain airport with weather-related cancellations and delays, especially in winter. Airlines serving ASE include United, American, and Delta with seasonal nonstops from major hubs. Advise clients to have a backup plan — Eagle County Regional Airport (EGE), near Vail, is 70 miles away and offers more reliable service.
Winter Season
The Skiing — Four Mountains, Four Personalities
The genius of Aspen Snowmass is that its four mountains aren't redundant — each has a distinct character, and a single lift ticket grants access to all of them.
Aspen Mountain (Ajax)
The original. No green runs, no beginners — just 675 acres of serious, sustained intermediate and expert terrain rising directly from downtown Aspen. The Silver Queen Gondola delivers you 3,267 vertical feet to the summit in 14 minutes. Signature runs like Spar Gulch and Ruthie's Run are iconic intermediate cruisers, while the double-black bumps on Walsh's and the steeps of the Back of Bell challenge experts. Ajax is where Aspen's ski culture was born, and riding the gondola up while watching the town shrink below is one of skiing's great rituals.
Snowmass
The big mountain. At 3,342 acres with a 4,406-foot vertical drop (the largest in the US), Snowmass could be a world-class resort all by itself. Wide-open blue cruisers like Long Shot (5.3 miles) and Elk Camp Meadows are perfect for intermediate skiers who want to cover ground. The Cirque and Hanging Valley Wall deliver serious expert terrain, while the lower mountain's mellow pitch is ideal for families. Snowmass Village, at the base, has evolved into a vibrant destination in its own right with lodging, dining, and the Limelight Hotel anchoring Base Village.
Aspen Highlands
The locals' mountain and, for many expert skiers, the crown jewel of the Aspen Snowmass system. The in-bounds terrain is excellent — steeps, glades, and the famous Exhibition run — but the real draw is Highland Bowl. A 45-minute boot-pack hike above the top of the Loge Peak Lift delivers access to 830 vertical feet of above-treeline, often-untracked powder in one of the most dramatic bowls in North America. Highland Bowl is a rite of passage for serious Colorado skiers.
Buttermilk
Don't let the gentle reputation fool you — Buttermilk is a perfectly designed learning mountain and the host of the Winter X Games every January. Its terrain parks are among the best in the world, and the open, sunny groomers are ideal for beginners and families. It's also the most affordable lift ticket in the system if purchased standalone.
Beyond the Slopes — Winter Activities
- Silver Queen Gondola Sightseeing — Non-skiers can purchase a Sightseeing Ticket to ride the Aspen Mountain gondola to the Sundeck restaurant at 11,212 feet for panoramic views and lunch. The Elk Camp Gondola on Snowmass offers the same experience.
- Breathtaker Alpine Coaster — On Snowmass, this elevated rail coaster winds through the forest at speeds up to 28 mph. Accessed via the Elk Camp Gondola. Tickets from $66; combo coaster-and-tubing packages available for $78. (aspensnowmass.com)
- Snowcat Dinner Rides — One of Aspen's most memorable dining experiences. A snowcat carries guests up the mountain to Lynn Britt Cabin or Cloud Nine Alpine Bistro for a multi-course dinner in an alpine cabin setting. Reservations fill quickly. (aspensnowmass.com)
- Cross-Country Skiing & Snowshoeing — The Aspen Cross-Country Center and Snowmass Cross-Country Center together offer 60+ miles of groomed Nordic trails. Guided snowshoe tours with the Aspen Center for Environmental Studies (ACES) run daily at 10 AM and 1 PM on both Aspen Mountain and Snowmass. (aspennature.org)
- Snowmobiling — T-Lazy-7 Ranch runs guided snowmobile tours into the backcountry, including winter trips to the famed Maroon Bells area when the road is closed to vehicles. An intimate, adventurous way to experience the Elk Mountains. (tlazy7.com)
- Ice Skating — The Silver Circle Ice Rink in downtown Aspen offers skating under the stars. Skate rentals available from CP Burger — pair your session with burgers, tots, and spiked shakes. In Snowmass, the Base Village rink offers free skating daily with fire pits and hot cocoa nearby.
- Aspen Art Museum — Free admission to rotating contemporary art exhibitions across three floors, plus a rooftop café with the best view in town — looking directly at the Silver Queen Gondola and Aspen Mountain. Open Tuesday–Sunday, 10 AM–6 PM. The Saturday après party (5–9 PM) with DJ Golden is one of Aspen's best-kept social secrets. (aspenartmuseum.org)
- Tubing at Elk Camp — Snowmass offers lift-served tubing lanes at Elk Camp Meadows. Seven daily sessions; fun for all ages. Friday Ullr Nights add evening sessions with food, music, and a festive mountain atmosphere.
- X Games Aspen — Held annually in late January at Buttermilk, this ESPN-broadcast event features the world's best action sports athletes in ski and snowboard superpipe, slopestyle, and big air. Free to attend. The energy, concerts, and après scene make it one of winter's best spectacles.
- Après Ski — Aspen's après scene is legendary. Ajax Tavern at the base of Aspen Mountain is the classic — truffle fries and champagne on the sun-drenched patio. The J-Bar at the Hotel Jerome (since 1889) serves craft cocktails in a beautifully preserved Victorian saloon.
Top 10 Restaurants
1. Element 47
Cuisine: Contemporary American · Price: $$$$ · Vibe: Located inside The Little Nell, Aspen's only Five-Star, Five-Diamond hotel, Element 47 is the town's most prestigious dining room. The seasonal tasting menu showcases Colorado ingredients with extraordinary technique. The wine program — 20,000+ bottles — is one of the best in the Rocky Mountain West. Dress well; this is a special-occasion dinner.
2. Matsuhisa
Cuisine: Japanese-Peruvian · Price: $$$–$$$$ · Vibe: Chef Nobu Matsuhisa's Aspen outpost has been a fixture since 1998 and remains one of the hottest reservations in town. The signature black cod with miso is a must, but the omakase experience — particularly at the sushi bar — is where Matsuhisa shines. Sleek, buzzy, and A-list without being exclusionary.
3. Ajax Tavern
Cuisine: French-American bistro · Price: $$–$$$ · Vibe: At the base of Aspen Mountain, Ajax Tavern's sun-drenched patio is the epicenter of Aspen's après-ski scene. The truffle fries are practically a civic monument. Inside, the seasonal menu elevates bistro classics — steak frites, burgers, and a superb raw bar. Come for the scene, stay for the food.
4. White House Tavern
Cuisine: Elevated sandwich shop & American · Price: $$–$$$ · Vibe: Housed in a Victorian cottage at 302 E. Hopkins, this is the lunch spot in Aspen. The fried chicken sandwich and lobster roll have cult followings. The cozy interior and garden patio feel worlds away from the bustle of downtown, despite being steps from it. Now with a second location in Snowmass Base Village.
5. The Red Onion
Cuisine: American pub · Price: $$ · Vibe: Aspen's oldest restaurant, continuously operating since 1892. Downstairs is a lively bar and grill with burgers, Mexican fare, and late-night energy. Upstairs, the dining room offers a more refined menu. The Red Onion is history, culture, and a damn good time — all in one Victorian building.
6. Bosq
Cuisine: Modern seasonal · Price: $$$–$$$$ · Vibe: Chef Barclay Dodge's seasonally driven restaurant has quietly become one of Aspen's most critically acclaimed tables. Imaginative, ingredient-focused dishes draw on global techniques while rooted in what's growing in the Colorado mountains. The intimate space and thoughtful service create a memorable evening.
7. Clark's Oyster Bar
Cuisine: Seafood · Price: $$–$$$ · Vibe: An outpost of the beloved Austin original, Clark's brings a coastal seafood bar to the mountains. Fresh oysters, shrimp cocktail, lobster rolls, and excellent cocktails in a retro-nautical setting. Perfect for a lighter dinner or a long, indulgent lunch.
8. Mawa's Kitchen
Cuisine: Afro-Caribbean-inspired · Price: $$ · Vibe: A hidden gem that defies expectation. Chef Mawa McQueen brings bold, globally influenced flavors — jollof rice, African-spiced lamb, and Caribbean-style seafood — to a casual, welcoming space. The Crêpe Therapy Café (by Mawa's Kitchen) at 401 E. Cooper is the breakfast counterpart, serving sweet and savory crepes, pastries, and excellent coffee.
9. Pine Creek Cookhouse
Cuisine: Rustic American · Price: $$$ · Vibe: Accessible only by cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, or horse-drawn sleigh in winter, Pine Creek Cookhouse sits in the Ashcroft Ghost Town area, 12 miles from Aspen. The journey is the appetizer; the multi-course dinner featuring elk, bison, and Colorado trout is the main event. One of the most unique dining experiences in the American West.
10. The J-Bar (Hotel Jerome)
Cuisine: American classics & cocktails · Price: $$–$$$ · Vibe: More of a bar-restaurant than a formal dining room, the J-Bar is Aspen's living room. Operating since 1889 in the landmark Hotel Jerome, it serves elevated comfort food — the Jerome burger is iconic — alongside craft cocktails in a beautifully restored Victorian space. The après crowd, the dinner crowd, and the late-night crowd all converge here.
aubergeresorts.com/hoteljerome
Summer Season
Aspen in summer is a different kind of revelation. The slopes become meadows of wildflowers, the festivals multiply, and the pace shifts from adrenaline to something closer to awe. With the Elk Mountains as a backdrop and the Maroon Bells–Snowmass Wilderness at the doorstep, summer Aspen is arguably even more beautiful than winter.
Hiking
- Maroon Bells — The most photographed peaks in Colorado and an absolute must-visit. Twin 14,000-foot mountains rising above Maroon Lake create a scene of almost impossible beauty. During peak summer (late June–early October), private vehicles are restricted — take the shuttle bus from Aspen Highlands. Easy lakeside walks and challenging 14er ascents available. (aspenchamber.org)
- Smuggler Mountain — A quick, accessible hike from downtown Aspen to an observation deck with stunning views of the town, Aspen Mountain, and the Roaring Fork Valley. Moderate difficulty, about 3 miles round trip.
- Hunter Creek Trail — A local favorite starting from the edge of town, climbing into the Hunter Creek Valley with wildflower meadows and mountain vistas. Can be combined with the Smuggler Mountain loop.
- Snowmass Lake — A 16-mile out-and-back backpacking trip to one of the most spectacular alpine lakes in the Maroon Bells–Snowmass Wilderness. Best enjoyed as an overnight with a tent and packed provisions.
- Elk Camp Summit Trail — From the top of the Snowmass gondola, this trail leads to 360-degree alpine views including the Maroon Bells. Multiple shorter options branch off for less ambitious hikers.
Mountain Biking
Aspen Snowmass is Colorado's first and only IMBA Gold-Level Ride Center:
- Snowmass Bike Park — Gondola-and-chairlift-served with 2,897 vertical feet of purpose-built downhill trails. Beginner trails like EZ-PZ and Verde are approachable; the black-diamond Valhalla (3 miles, 1,400 ft drop) is a rush for experienced riders. (aspensnowmass.com)
- Government Trail — A legendary cross-country route from Snowmass to Aspen, crossing both Snowmass and Buttermilk ski areas. Technical, rewarding, and endlessly scenic.
- Rim Trail Loop — A Snowmass classic climbing to a ridge with expansive views of the Brush Creek Valley, Mount Daly, and Capitol Peak. Best combined with the Seven Star descent.
- Smuggler Mountain & Hunter Creek — Rocky, technical, old-school singletrack accessed right from downtown Aspen. The Hobbit Trail, Secret Trail, and Hummingbird Trail reward skilled riders.
- Rio Grande Trail — A paved, mostly flat path perfect for cruiser bikes, running from Aspen through the Roaring Fork Valley.
Festivals & Events
Aspen's summer cultural calendar is without peer in mountain towns:
- Food & Wine Classic in Aspen — The marquee culinary event in American food culture. Held each June, this three-day festival features the country's top chefs, sommeliers, and food media. Tickets sell out months in advance. (foodandwine.com)
- Aspen Music Festival and School — A nine-week summer classical music program (late June–mid-August) featuring world-class orchestral performances, chamber music, and recitals in the Benedict Music Tent and Harris Concert Hall. Many performances are free or affordable. (aspenmusicfestival.com)
- Aspen Ideas Festival — An annual gathering of thinkers, leaders, and creators exploring society's most pressing issues. Hosted by the Aspen Institute each late June. (aspenideas.org)
- Jazz Aspen Snowmass (JAS) — Summer concert series featuring major musical acts across genres, including the JAS Labor Day Experience.
- Snowmass Balloon Festival — Colorful hot air balloons launch against the Elk Mountain backdrop each September.
More Summer Activities
- Lost Forest at Snowmass — An adventure complex including an extensive zipline canopy tour, ropes challenge course, the Breathtaker Alpine Coaster, climbing wall, trout fishing pond, and disc golf. The centerpiece summer experience at Snowmass.
- Scenic Gondola Rides — Both the Silver Queen Gondola on Aspen Mountain and Elk Camp Gondola on Snowmass operate in summer, providing access to hiking, dining, mountaintop yoga, and sunset events.
- Fly Fishing — The Roaring Fork River offers excellent year-round trout fishing. Summer conditions are ideal, with multiple outfitters offering guided wade and float trips.
- Rafting — The Roaring Fork and Colorado rivers provide Class II–IV rapids for half- and full-day guided trips.
- Golf — Aspen Golf Club and Snowmass Club offer stunning mountain course experiences.
- Horseback Riding — Multiple outfitters, including T-Lazy-7 Ranch, offer guided trail rides through alpine meadows and the Maroon Bells area.
- Paintball at Snowmass — Outdoor paintball in the Timber Territory arena adjacent to the Lost Forest. Groups can book private sessions.
Seasonal Weather & Conditions
Winter (November–April)
| Month | Avg High / Low | Snowfall | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| November | 39°F / 13°F | ~25" | Season opens late November. Early-season variable conditions. |
| December | 30°F / 5°F | ~62" | Deep winter arrives. Holiday period (Dec 20–Jan 3) is the busiest and most expensive window. |
| January | 29°F / 3°F | ~54" | Coldest month. X Games at Buttermilk. Excellent powder conditions; dress warmly for Highland Bowl hike. |
| February | 33°F / 8°F | ~62" | Historically the snowiest month. Wintersköl festival. Great balance of snow quality and lengthening days. |
| March | 40°F / 17°F | ~71" | Often the snowiest month overall. Spring skiing begins — warm sun, soft snow, fewer crowds. Best value month. |
| April | 49°F / 24°F | ~35" | Season winds down mid-to-late April. Corn snow and bluebird days. Great for relaxed spring skiing. |
Summer (June–September)
| Month | Avg High / Low | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| June | 72°F / 36°F | Wildflowers begin (peak late June). Food & Wine Classic. Some high-elevation trails may have lingering snow. |
| July | 80°F / 42°F | Peak summer. Warm days, afternoon thunderstorms (typically 1–2 hours). Music Festival in full swing. Best hiking month. |
| August | 77°F / 40°F | Continued warm weather with fewer storms. Music Festival continues. Excellent for all outdoor activities. |
| September | 70°F / 32°F | Aspen leaves turn gold — the valley becomes a sea of yellow and orange. Cooler nights. Balloon Festival. Many consider this Aspen's most beautiful month. |
What to Pack — Winter: High-quality base layers, insulated ski jacket and pants, warm hat, goggles, gloves, and sunscreen (high-altitude sun is intense). For Highland Bowl, add a helmet, climbing skins or boot crampons, and extra water.
What to Pack — Summer: Layered clothing (mornings can be chilly even in July), rain jacket for afternoon thunderstorms, sturdy hiking boots, sunscreen, hat, reusable water bottle, and insect repellent for evening activities.
Transportation & Getting Around
Aspen Snowmass is one of Arion's flagship destinations, and for good reason — the drive from Denver demands skill, attention, and experience that a luxury chauffeur service is uniquely positioned to provide. Between I-70 ski traffic, Glenwood Canyon's unpredictable closures, and the winding climb up Highway 82, having an ice-trained, AWD-equipped Arion driver transforms a four-hour gauntlet into a relaxing ride where you can work, sleep, or simply enjoy the scenery.
Arion provides door-to-door transfers from Denver International Airport (DIA) to any Aspen or Snowmass lodging property, with real-time flight tracking so your driver adjusts seamlessly to delays. For clients flying into the closer Aspen/Pitkin County Airport (ASE), Arion offers quick, reliable transfers — particularly valuable when ASE weather diversions send flights to Eagle County (EGE), and your driver needs to pivot to a Plan B pickup 70 miles away.
Arion's concierge team can coordinate restaurant reservations, ski arrangements, and in-valley transportation — including transfers between Aspen, Snowmass Village, and the Maroon Bells staging area. For guests exploring the broader region, day trips to Vail, Glenwood Springs, or Crested Butte are easily arranged.
The Roaring Fork Transportation Authority (RFTA) provides excellent free local bus service within Aspen, between Aspen and Snowmass, and up-valley to Glenwood Springs. For daily errands and short hops, the bus system is first-rate. But for the mountain drive to and from Denver — especially in winter — there's no substitute for a professional behind the wheel.
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For the complete picture, see our Colorado's Mountain Ski Resorts: The Ultimate Guide to Every Destination.
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