Walking up to the lift-ticket counter at a ski resort and buying a ticket for the day is like strolling into the airport and saying, 鈥淚鈥檇 like to buy a ticket to Denver, please.鈥 Nobody does that anymore. Lift tickets are best purchased online and in advance, just like plane tickets. And with the advent of collective season passes鈥攎ega passes like the popular Epic and Ikon鈥攆ewer skiers and snowboarders are buying pricey day tickets anymore. And why should they?听
A walk-up day ticket to Vail, Colorado,听during peak season costs over $200; at Aspen, it鈥檚 $179. Meanwhile, an Epic Pass, which grants you unrestricted access to Vail and an immense number of other resorts, currently runs for听$969; an Ikon Pass, which听gets you seven days of skiing at Aspen and unlimited skiing at over a dozen other resorts, is currently $1,049. You only need to ski four to six days to make those pass prices worth it. But the Epic and Ikon are not the only collective passes out there. There are others, and many have killer deals.听
Epic Pass

Best For: Families with young kids;听world-traveling skiers;听East Coasters or Midwesterners who take a yearly ski trip out west.
What You Get: The Epic Pass听launched in 2008 to grant skiers and riders access to all of , which at the time included Vail, Beaver Creek, Keystone, and Breckenridge in Colorado and Heavenly in California. Vail鈥檚 been on an acquisition frenzy since then, and the complete Epic Pass now gets you entry to 20 Vail-owned resorts, 17 more mountains听recently acquired from Peak Resorts, and a in the United States and abroad.听If you don鈥檛 plan on traveling the world all winter, you may not need the full-priced pass, and there are less expensive,听slightly more restrictive options that are perfectly fine for most skiers.
What You Need to Know: The Epic Local Pass鈥攚hich currently costs $719鈥攇rants you full access to your local hill (if you live near Crested Butte, Breckenridge, or Keystone, Colorado; Stevens Pass, Washington;听Okemo, Vermont; Afton Alps, Minnesota; or Mount听Brighton,听Michigan)听and limited, holiday-restricted access to the rest on the list. You can also get local passes for just Lake Tahoe鈥檚 resorts, just Colorado鈥檚 Summit County, and a variety of others. Or check out the newly introduced Epic Day Pass, which gets you between one and seven days of skiing starting at $109, with discounts of up to 50 percent on听lift-ticket prices after that.听
Buy Now: 听听
Ikon Pass

Best For: Van-dwelling bums or those with a ski bucket list;听Tahoe locals;听Colorado residents looking for something different; those under the age of 22.
What You Get: The Ikon Pass was the headline-making newcomer when it debuted in early 2018 from the Alterra Mountain Company. It now offers full access to 14 ski resorts owned by Alterra鈥攕pots like Mammoth Mountain and Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows, California; Crystal Mountain, Washington; Steamboat, Colorado; and Solitude, Utah鈥攁nd up to seven days at 26 partner properties. That list includes some real standout destinations, like Aspen; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; Big Sky, Montana; Revelstoke, British Columbia; Taos, New Mexico; and Alta and听Snowbird, Utah. You鈥檒l also receive additional discounts and benefits, like lodging deals, friends-and-family tickets, and early bookings at CMH Heli-Skiing in Canada.听
The adult Ikon Pass is currently on sale for $1,049, or there鈥檚 a base pass with blackout dates available for $749. Youngsters get better deals:听the Ikon young-adult pass, for those ages听13 to 22, is $779; kids ages 5 to 12 are $399; and the under-four crowd is $49.
What You Need to Know: If you frequent one of the 26 partner resorts,听the Ikon Pass will get you seven days at your home hill. If that鈥檚 enough for you, great. But if you plan to ski more than seven days at your mountain, you鈥檒l still need to purchase a season pass to your local resort鈥攁nd as of now, that听doesn鈥檛 include reciprocal deals to the partner resorts.
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Mountain Collective

Best For: Those who don鈥檛 need a full-season pass but still want to ski a handful of days at rad places;听backcountry skiers who sometimes hit the resort.听
What You Get: Despite competition from bigger passes, the Mountain Collective Pass is holding strong and will return for its eighth season this year. It鈥檚 the听occasional skier鈥檚 dream. You get two days of skiing at each of the participating 18 resorts around North America and beyond. That includes Alta and Snowbird;听Arapahoe Basin and听Aspen Snowmass, Colorado; Banff Sunshine and Lake Louise,听Alberta; Big Sky;听Jackson Hole;听Mammoth and Squaw Valley;听Revelstoke;听Sugarbush, Vermont; and Taos, as well as international locations in France, New Zealand, Australia, and Chile. After your two days are up, you鈥檒l get half-priced tickets at all the included听resorts.听The pass is currently on sale for $489; kids 12 and under are $199.
What You Need to Know: You鈥檒l also get lodging deals at many of the destinations.听听
Buy Now: 听听
Indy Pass

Best For: Families who frequent small, local hills; lower-budget, occasional skiers; those who prefer independent ski hills versus big destination resorts.听
What You Get: The Indy Pass launched this summer as an alternative, entry-level pass to the other, bigger-ticket ones. The best part? It costs just $199. (The price will increase by $20 on December 1.) For that听you鈥檒l get two days at 34 independent or family-owned resorts across the Pacific Northwest, Midwest, and East Coast, for a total of 72 days of uncrowded, low-key skiing and riding. These are the mom-and-pop hills where burgers in the base lodge don鈥檛 cost $18 and metal lift-ticket wickets still exist. We鈥檙e talking about places like Brundage,听Idaho;听Hoodoo, Oregon; Hurricane Ridge, Washington;听Spirit Mountain, Minnesota;听and Berkshire East and Bolton Valley,听Vermont.
What You Need to Know: There鈥檚 no universal pass in your pocket that scans through an RFID machine in the lift line. This is old-school. If you travel to any of the participating ski areas, you鈥檒l present your ID at the ticket window and be issued a day ticket. Several resorts have a few blackout dates when the offer doesn鈥檛 work, but many offer additional discounts for tickets after your two days are used up, plus discounted tickets for your kids.
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Powder Alliance

Best For:听Anyone whose favorite ski hill isn鈥檛 on the Ikon or Epic. If you can鈥檛 find it there,听there鈥檚 a good chance it鈥檚 on this one.听听
What You Get: There鈥檚 no actual pass for the Powder Alliance. The way this deal works is,听if you buy a regular-season pass to one of the 19 participating Powder Alliance resorts, you鈥檒l get three days of lift tickets at the 18 other spots.听This one covers places like Loveland and Monarch Mountain, Colorado;听Sierra-at-Tahoe and Sugar Bowl, California;听Bridger Bowl,听Montana;听Bogus Basin and Schweitzer,听Idaho;听Angel Fire,听New Mexico;听Mount听Hood Ski Bowl and Timberline, Oregon;听Whitewater, British Columbia;听and even听La Parva, Chile, and Kiroro, Japan. Lodging deals at many of the places are included as well.
What You Need to Know: There鈥檚 major fine print on this pass, with restrictions and blackout dates that vary at the different resorts, so check before you plan a trip.听
Buy Now: Check the list of participating resorts, then buy a pass at the nearest one.听