
Mountain Review: Brian Head
This under-the-radar southern Utah destination offers striking terrain at an affordable price.

Mountain Review: Hunter
High-speed lifts, reasonably varied terrain, and proximity to New York City make this Catskill mountain an appealing choice on paper. However, poor crowd management really hurts the overall experience.
Mountain Review: Windham
This Catskill resort can’t beat out the true East Coast destinations in snow, acreage, or terrain diversity, but it lacks some of the major issues that plague nearby competitors. Peak ticket values are among the worst of any North American ski area.

Mountain Review: Gore
New York State’s largest ski resort stands out with excellent glade terrain, but it can’t match the snow quality or on-mountain infrastructure of the best East Coast mountains.

Mountain Review: Bolton Valley
This Vermont mountain is too small and undeveloped to compete with the state’s most popular destinations, but its combination of local, uncrowded slopes and strong natural snowfall may do the trick for some.

Mountain Review: Mad River Glen
With very limited snowmaking and a ban on snowboarders, this small Vermont mountain is about as raw as it gets for the Northeast.

Mountain Review: Smugglers’ Notch
Ancient lifts and lackluster resiliency measures hold back a staple of the northern Vermont skiing scene.

Mountain Review: Jay Peak
Vermont’s northernmost resort offers class-leading snow and expert terrain, but resiliency issues hurt it against more convenient competitors.

Mountain Review: Saddleback
Reborn after a five-year hiatus, this remote Maine mountain delivers a combination of natural beauty, empty slopes, and reasonably well-rounded terrain that’s tough to match anywhere else in the Northeast.

Mountain Review: Sunday River
One of New England’s largest, most reliable ski resorts is held back by so-so vertical and outdated lifts in key areas.