Corduroy Carving and Chill: Park City's Mid-January Snow Conditions episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 11, 2026 · 5 MIN

Corduroy Carving and Chill: Park City's Mid-January Snow Conditions

from Park City Mountain Resort, Utah Ski Report · host Inception Point AI

Ski Report for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah Daily Ski Conditions for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah If you’re waxing your skis or dialing in your snowboard for Park City Mountain right now, you’re sliding into a pretty sweet mid-January window: the mountain finally has a real winter base, the storms have eased off, and locals are shifting from “pray for snow” to “where’s the softest corduroy?” Thanks to early-January storms across Utah that dropped up to five feet at some resorts, Park City came out of its slow start with a solid base and rapidly expanding terrain. Recent reports put the settled base around the mid-mountain in the low-50-inch range, which is right in the “go-anywhere-on-piste” zone rather than tiptoe-through-the-sharks territory. That base is now being buffed daily by cold overnight temps, so groomers are laying down that classic Utah chalky corduroy in the mornings with softening later in the day on sunnier aspects. Lift-wise, you’re no longer stuck lapping just the lower hill. As of this weekend, roughly half the lifts are spinning with over 100 trails open, and the resort is very much in “open more terrain every few days” mode as patrol signs off on coverage and hazards. Locals are stoked that Jupiter, McConkey’s, 9990, and Peak 5 are now on the board, which means legit steeps and fun lines are in play, though you should still expect thin spots and sharks on the more technical routes and on popular traverses. For new snow, the script right now is “feast ended, crumbs ahead.” The big storm cycle that kicked off the month has wrapped up, and over the last 24–48 hours there’s been little to no fresh natural snow. What you are skiing is mostly packed powder and machine-groomed on-piste, with pockets of older soft snow in shaded trees and on north-facing slopes. Off-piste has a mixed personality: in sheltered spots it’s chalky and fun; in wind-affected or sun-hit areas it can be firm and punchy, so ski it with a tuned edge and realistic expectations. Weather-wise, think classic high-pressure interlude: cold nights, relatively mild days, and mostly clear skies. Daytime highs around the base are generally hovering in the upper 20s to low 30s Fahrenheit, with colder temps up high and overnight lows easily dropping into the teens or single digits. That’s perfect for preserving the snow and keeping the snowguns humming on key connectors and high-traffic runs. Wind has been light to moderate, more of a “face sting on the ridges” than a lift-stopping issue. Looking at the next five days, don’t bank on refilling your snorkel. Most forecasts are calling for a dry stretch with a mix of sunny and partly cloudy days, highs on the mountain in the 20s to low 30s, and continued cold nights. There’s a hint of a minor system well down the line with maybe an inch or so of snow, but nothing that screams full-on powder day in the immediate future. The upside: stability, consistent groomers, good visibility, and low avalanche hazard in-bound This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Ski Report for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah Daily Ski Conditions for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah If you’re waxing your skis or dialing in your snowboard for Park City Mountain right now, you’re sliding into a pretty sweet mid-January window: the mountain finally has a real winter base, the storms have eased off, and locals are shifting from “pray for snow” to “where’s the softest corduroy?” Thanks to early-January storms across Utah that dropped up to five feet at some resorts, Park City came out of its slow start with a solid base and rapidly expanding terrain. Recent reports put the settled base around the mid-mountain in the low-50-inch range, which is right in the “go-anywhere-on-piste” zone rather than tiptoe-through-the-sharks territory. That base is now being buffed daily by cold overnight temps, so groomers are laying down that classic Utah chalky corduroy in the mornings with softening later in the day on sunnier aspects. Lift-wise, you’re no longer stuck lapping just the lower hill. As of this weekend, roughly half the lifts are spinning with over 100 trails open, and the resort is very much in “open more terrain every few days” mode as patrol signs off on coverage and hazards. Locals are stoked that Jupiter, McConkey’s, 9990, and Peak 5 are now on the board, which means legit steeps and fun lines are in play, though you should still expect thin spots and sharks on the more technical routes and on popular traverses. For new snow, the script right now is “feast ended, crumbs ahead.” The big storm cycle that kicked off the month has wrapped up, and over the last 24–48 hours there’s been little to no fresh natural snow. What you are skiing is mostly packed powder and machine-groomed on-piste, with pockets of older soft snow in shaded trees and on north-facing slopes. Off-piste has a mixed personality: in sheltered spots it’s chalky and fun; in wind-affected or sun-hit areas it can be firm and punchy, so ski it with a tuned edge and realistic expectations. Weather-wise, think classic high-pressure interlude: cold nights, relatively mild days, and mostly clear skies. Daytime highs around the base are generally hovering in the upper 20s to low 30s Fahrenheit, with colder temps up high and overnight lows easily dropping into the teens or single digits. That’s perfect for preserving the snow and keeping the snowguns humming on key connectors and high-traffic runs. Wind has been light to moderate, more of a “face sting on the ridges” than a lift-stopping issue. Looking at the next five days, don’t bank on refilling your snorkel. Most forecasts are calling for a dry stretch with a mix of sunny and partly cloudy days, highs on the mountain in the 20s to low 30s, and continued cold nights. There’s a hint of a minor system well down the line with maybe an inch or so of snow, but nothing that screams full-on powder day in the immediate future. The upside: stability, consistent groomers, good visibility, and low avalanche hazard in-bound This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Corduroy Carving and Chill: Park City's Mid-January Snow Conditions

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This episode is 5 minutes long.

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This episode was published on January 11, 2026.

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Ski Report for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah Daily Ski Conditions for Park City Mountain Resort, Utah If you’re waxing your skis or dialing in your snowboard for Park City Mountain right now, you’re sliding into a pretty sweet mid-January...

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