2026 Is Weeks Away: Why Private Ski Clubs Are Rewriting the Membership Playbook - Private Club Marketing

2026 Is Weeks Away: Why Private Ski Clubs Are Rewriting the Membership Playbook

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Private Club Marketing's editorial and research is conducted in conjunction with its advisory and development team.

As 2026 approaches, private ski club membership trends are shifting dramatically. Access alone no longer defines value; clubs must focus on year-round engagement, lifestyle amenities, and cultural stewardship. From expanded clubhouse experiences to wellness and family programming, top alpine clubs are rethinking how members interact with the property. Boards that embrace these trends and balance growth with intentional scarcity are positioning their clubs for stronger retention, healthier communities, and long-term stability.

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As 2026 approaches, private ski clubs find themselves at an inflection point—not because of snowfall totals or lift infrastructure, but because the member itself has changed.

Across North America’s leading mountain markets, private ski clubs are confronting the same reality: access alone no longer sustains value. The next era of alpine membership is being defined by usage patterns, retention economics, and year-round relevance.

Board Callout: How Members Actually Use the Club

Member Usage Distribution (Private Alpine Clubs)

Activity Category

% of Total Member Touchpoints

On-Mountain Skiing

35–45%

Clubhouse / Dining / Social

30–40%

Family & Kids Programming

10–15%

Wellness / Fitness / Events

10–15%

Board Insight:
Clubs that invest exclusively in terrain and lift access are under-serving more than half of their actual member interactions.

From Lift Access to Lifestyle Infrastructure

U.S. ski visits now exceed 65 million annually, with over 70% concentrated in the top destination resorts. Congestion is no longer seasonal—it is structural.

Private ski clubs originally emerged as a solution to crowding. In 2026, they must evolve again—this time into lifestyle platforms that support how members live in mountain environments.

Clubs that have expanded:

  • Fireside dining
  • Flexible social spaces
  • Wellness and recovery facilities
  • Work-friendly environments

consistently report 15–25% higher engagement and materially stronger retention.

Board Callout: Retention Economics

Average Annual Dues Attrition

Club Type

Annual Attrition

Winter-Only Ski Clubs

9–12%

Hybrid / Four-Season Clubs

5–7%

Fully Activated Year-Round Clubs

3–5%

Board Insight:
Every percentage point of attrition reduced has a compounding effect on initiation stability, waitlist strength, and long-term capital planning.

The End of the Peak-Season Membership Model

The traditional ski club model relied on a short winter window to justify dues. That model is eroding rapidly.

Contributing factors:

  • 30%+ of professionals now work remotely or hybrid
  • Second-home owners in mountain towns are extending stays by 20–35% outside winter
  • Families are restructuring school and travel calendars around longer seasonal presence

A membership that loses relevance in April increasingly feels incomplete.

Board Callout: Seasonality Risk

Revenue Dependency by Season

Season

Winter-Centric Club

Four-Season Club

Winter

65–75%

45–55%

Summer

10–15%

20–25%

Shoulder Seasons

10–15%

20–30%

Board Insight:
Over-reliance on winter revenue exposes clubs to weather volatility, staffing instability, and member disengagement.

Market-Specific Reality Check

Mammoth Lakes

  • Heavy second-home ownership
  • Strong shoulder-season potential (summer, fall)
  • Increasing competition from destination-style luxury rentals

Strategic Signal:
Members expect the club to function as a community anchor, not a seasonal amenity.

Lake Tahoe

  • Highly fragmented resort landscape
  • Traffic and access constraints driving demand for predictability
  • Year-round outdoor culture already established

Strategic Signal:
Scarcity and controlled access matter more than terrain expansion.

Park City

  • High concentration of full-time and semi-full-time residents
  • Remote work normalized
  • Strong demand for social, dining, and wellness integration

Strategic Signal:
The clubhouse is becoming more valuable than the chairlift.

Big Sky

  • Ultra-high-net-worth membership base
  • Strong emphasis on privacy, space, and family
  • Longer average length of stay per visit

Strategic Signal:
Membership discipline and cultural stewardship are mission-critical.

Scarcity as a Cultural Strategy

Clubs that expanded aggressively between 2020–2023 are now experiencing:

  • Overcrowded social spaces
  • Declining satisfaction despite higher revenue
  • Erosion of member trust

By contrast, clubs with hard caps and structured guest access report:

  • 20–35% higher satisfaction
  • Stronger waitlists
  • More stable initiation values

Scarcity is no longer a marketing phrase—it is an operational philosophy.

Board Callout: Growth Discipline

Membership Strategy Outcomes

Approach

Short-Term Revenue

Long-Term Stability

Rapid Expansion

High

Low

Disciplined Caps

Moderate

High

Intentional Growth

Strong

Strong

What Boards Must Decide Before 2026

The most important decisions ahead are not tactical—they are directional.

Boards should ask:

  • Are we building for lifetime members or seasonal users?
  • Does our facility reflect how members actually spend time?
  • Are we protecting culture as intentionally as revenue?

Clubs that answer these questions proactively will enter the next decade with stronger balance sheets, healthier communities, and more resilient membership models.

LOOKING AHEAD

2026 is not a seasonal reset.
It is a strategic launch point.

The private ski clubs that succeed next will not be the ones with the most terrain—but the ones with the clearest identity, the strongest culture, and the discipline to protect both.

The ascent ahead belongs to those willing to rethink the path.

2026 Is Weeks Away: Why Private Ski Clubs Are Rewriting the Membership Playbook

As 2026 approaches, private ski club membership trends are shifting dramatically. Access alone no longer defines value; clubs must focus on year-round engagement, lifestyle amenities, and cultural stewardship. From expanded clubhouse experiences to wellness and family programming, top alpine clubs are rethinking how members interact with the property. Boards that embrace these trends and balance growth with intentional scarcity are positioning their clubs for stronger retention, healthier communities, and long-term stability.

Join our Newsletter

As 2026 approaches, private ski clubs find themselves at an inflection point—not because of snowfall totals or lift infrastructure, but because the member itself has changed.

Across North America’s leading mountain markets, private ski clubs are confronting the same reality: access alone no longer sustains value. The next era of alpine membership is being defined by usage patterns, retention economics, and year-round relevance.

Board Callout: How Members Actually Use the Club

Member Usage Distribution (Private Alpine Clubs)

Activity Category

% of Total Member Touchpoints

On-Mountain Skiing

35–45%

Clubhouse / Dining / Social

30–40%

Family & Kids Programming

10–15%

Wellness / Fitness / Events

10–15%

Board Insight:
Clubs that invest exclusively in terrain and lift access are under-serving more than half of their actual member interactions.

From Lift Access to Lifestyle Infrastructure

U.S. ski visits now exceed 65 million annually, with over 70% concentrated in the top destination resorts. Congestion is no longer seasonal—it is structural.

Private ski clubs originally emerged as a solution to crowding. In 2026, they must evolve again—this time into lifestyle platforms that support how members live in mountain environments.

Clubs that have expanded:

  • Fireside dining
  • Flexible social spaces
  • Wellness and recovery facilities
  • Work-friendly environments

consistently report 15–25% higher engagement and materially stronger retention.

Board Callout: Retention Economics

Average Annual Dues Attrition

Club Type

Annual Attrition

Winter-Only Ski Clubs

9–12%

Hybrid / Four-Season Clubs

5–7%

Fully Activated Year-Round Clubs

3–5%

Board Insight:
Every percentage point of attrition reduced has a compounding effect on initiation stability, waitlist strength, and long-term capital planning.

The End of the Peak-Season Membership Model

The traditional ski club model relied on a short winter window to justify dues. That model is eroding rapidly.

Contributing factors:

  • 30%+ of professionals now work remotely or hybrid
  • Second-home owners in mountain towns are extending stays by 20–35% outside winter
  • Families are restructuring school and travel calendars around longer seasonal presence

A membership that loses relevance in April increasingly feels incomplete.

Board Callout: Seasonality Risk

Revenue Dependency by Season

Season

Winter-Centric Club

Four-Season Club

Winter

65–75%

45–55%

Summer

10–15%

20–25%

Shoulder Seasons

10–15%

20–30%

Board Insight:
Over-reliance on winter revenue exposes clubs to weather volatility, staffing instability, and member disengagement.

Market-Specific Reality Check

Mammoth Lakes

  • Heavy second-home ownership
  • Strong shoulder-season potential (summer, fall)
  • Increasing competition from destination-style luxury rentals

Strategic Signal:
Members expect the club to function as a community anchor, not a seasonal amenity.

Lake Tahoe

  • Highly fragmented resort landscape
  • Traffic and access constraints driving demand for predictability
  • Year-round outdoor culture already established

Strategic Signal:
Scarcity and controlled access matter more than terrain expansion.

Park City

  • High concentration of full-time and semi-full-time residents
  • Remote work normalized
  • Strong demand for social, dining, and wellness integration

Strategic Signal:
The clubhouse is becoming more valuable than the chairlift.

Big Sky

  • Ultra-high-net-worth membership base
  • Strong emphasis on privacy, space, and family
  • Longer average length of stay per visit

Strategic Signal:
Membership discipline and cultural stewardship are mission-critical.

Scarcity as a Cultural Strategy

Clubs that expanded aggressively between 2020–2023 are now experiencing:

  • Overcrowded social spaces
  • Declining satisfaction despite higher revenue
  • Erosion of member trust

By contrast, clubs with hard caps and structured guest access report:

  • 20–35% higher satisfaction
  • Stronger waitlists
  • More stable initiation values

Scarcity is no longer a marketing phrase—it is an operational philosophy.

Board Callout: Growth Discipline

Membership Strategy Outcomes

Approach

Short-Term Revenue

Long-Term Stability

Rapid Expansion

High

Low

Disciplined Caps

Moderate

High

Intentional Growth

Strong

Strong

What Boards Must Decide Before 2026

The most important decisions ahead are not tactical—they are directional.

Boards should ask:

  • Are we building for lifetime members or seasonal users?
  • Does our facility reflect how members actually spend time?
  • Are we protecting culture as intentionally as revenue?

Clubs that answer these questions proactively will enter the next decade with stronger balance sheets, healthier communities, and more resilient membership models.

LOOKING AHEAD

2026 is not a seasonal reset.
It is a strategic launch point.

The private ski clubs that succeed next will not be the ones with the most terrain—but the ones with the clearest identity, the strongest culture, and the discipline to protect both.

The ascent ahead belongs to those willing to rethink the path.

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