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How to Visit Jackson Hole on the Cheap—You Just Need to Know These Tips
How to Visit Jackson Hole on the Cheap—You Just Need to Know These Tips
Dec 22, 2024 3:36 PM

  Ski trips shouldn’t be relegated to the rich and even richer. We all deserve to go powder chasing midwinter without dissolving our bank accounts. But these days, finding a budget way to ski requires serious homework. You can always venture away from the headliner areas to smaller, less crowded local ski hills that want to entice visitors through budget deals, but you may have to sacrifice quality of terrain and convenient lodging. Or you could go early or late season, but that means gambling on snow conditions.

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  So, what if you want to go big—like, say, Jackson Hole, Wyoming, in mid-winter—but not spend big? It’s tricky but not impossible. Here’s how to visit a popular, world-class destination like Jackson Hole on a ski-bum’s budget. It’s also a great destination year-round, for hiking, biking, climbing, boating, fly fishing, and camping.

  Getting to Jackson Hole, Wyoming To reach Jackson, Wyoming, located at the base of the Teton Range, you can drive, fly, or take a bus. If you’re coming by car, it’s four and a half hours from Salt Lake City, Utah, or eight hours from Denver, pending road and weather conditions. Salt Lake Express offers bus routes into Jackson from Salt Lake City, Boise, or Las Vegas starting at $75. The Jackson Hole Airport has nonstop direct flights from 12 major U.S. cities, including Denver, Seattle, San Francisco, Dallas, Chicago, and Newark, but flights aren’t exactly cheap. United Airlines does offer an early-season deal and $400 flight savings if you bundle lodging and airfare (deadline is by November 30, so save the idea for another year).

  From the airport, hop a public bus or taxi into town. Don’t bother renting a car. Parking at the ski resort starts at $18 a day, so your best bet is to take the local Start bus ($3) from town or the Village Road Transit Center, and you’ll be dropped at the base of Jackson Hole Mountain Resort in Teton Village.

  Check out flights to Salt Lake City

  Check out flights to Boise

  Check out flights to Las Vegas

  Check out flights to Denver

  Lift-Ticket Deals in Jackson If you can make it here early season, Jackson Hole Mountain Resort has a Ski in Jeans weekend from December 6-8: show up wearing denim, and you can ski Saturday for $25 or get a three-day lift ticket for $199, plus half-priced gear rentals at JH Sports and Teton Village Sports. Another great deal is that early or late season (November 29 through December 19 or March 17 through April 13), season passholders from any other ski area in the world can receive a 50-percent-off Golden Lift ticket at Jackson Hole. Have an Ikon Pass? You can come midwinter and have up to seven days with the full Ikon Pass; five days with the Base Pass Plus (which has select blackout dates), reservations required. Otherwise your best option is to buy tickets online well in advance for the lowest rate (they start at $218 a day).

  The best deal for skiing here isn’t at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort; it’s at Snow King, the town ski hill, which has big steeps and steep discounts. This is a much smaller ski area—500 acres compared to Jackson’s 2,500 inbounds acres—but its convenient location in town and minimal crowds make it a worthy destination, especially on a powder day. Single-day lift tickets start at $95, or with a $30 uphill ticket you can skin up under your own power and ski back down. The other hidden gem? Grand Targhee, a 2,602-acre powder mecca just over Teton Pass, 45 miles or about an hour and 10 minutes from Jackson, where you can score a half-day ticket for $132. Shuttles run from Jackson to Targhee and start at $199, which includes your lift ticket.

  Hire a Backcountry Guide or Take a Lesson: Info But Sorry, No Discounts There’s no discount way to book a ski lesson or hire a backcountry guide. You’ll pay a premium for these services. At Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, full day guided tours into the surrounding backcountry for experienced skiers start at around $379 (excluding lift ticket) per person. Resort adult group lessons for those just getting started skiing or wanting to progress to the next level start at $250 a day. If you’d rather not originate at the ski area, you can hire an AMGA-certified guide from Teton Backcountry Guides for a tour of the terrain off Teton Pass or in Grand Teton National Park starting at $265 a person.

  Find Cheap Lodging in Jackson

  If you want to stay at the base of Jackson Hole Mountain Resort for the closest access to the lifts, your best budget option is The Hostel (from $49), located right in Teton Village, which has both shared bunks and private rooms, plus a ski-tuning space, game room, and basic kitchen supplies.

  Otherwise, stay in town—12 miles away—and you’ll have your choice of a few wallet-friendly accommodations. Mountain Modern Motel has newly renovated rooms starting from around $177, and Ikon Pass holders get 20 percent off. The Cache House (from $55) has pod-style bunks, free coffee, and storage lockers for stashing your gear. And the recently redone Virginian Lodge (from $160) has hot tubs and firepits, an on-site burger joint, and a walk-through or drive-through liquor store that also sells breakfast burritos in the morning.

  Book Mountain Modern

  Book Cache House

  Book The Virginian Lodge

  Check out Airbnbs in Jackson

  Affordable Food and Drink Here If you’re on the mountain or staying in Teton Village, prices for food and drink aren’t cheap, so you’ll want to know where to look, and you can always pack a PBJ in your pocket. Start with a cup of high-quality espresso from the take-out window at Overview Coffee, next to the Mango Moose. The Bodega, at the gas station across the parking lot from the team in Teton Village, has a food truck out front and grab-and-go breakfast sandwiches and burritos. Mid-day or after skiing, hit up Yardsale inside the Snake River Lodge for a $9 hot dog or tacos, or the Mangy Moose, one of the most classic après ski bars ever, which has $6 pizza by the slice. For fuel on the mountain, ride the tram to the top of Rendezvous Peak, take in the view of the Tetons from the observation deck, then pop into Corbet’s Cabin for an $8.25 house-made waffle with brown-sugar butter or Nutella. (Trust us, it’s worth every penny.)

  In town there are lots of options for dining out, but many of them are pricy. Buying groceries at Albertson’s will save you. For other options, Picas has tasty burritos from $11 or $6 tacos. Up a flight of stairs from Town Square, you’ll find Yeah Buddy Pizza, which slings thin-crust large pies starting at around $17, or pick up a $5 slice from Pinky G’s.

  With locations in downtown Jackson and, seven miles away, the town of Wilson, Pearl Street Bagels is a locals’ favorite for no-fuss coffee and bagel sandwiches (a naked bagel costs $1.50). And the best breakfast burrito in town is served until 2 p.m. out of a take-out window on Glenwood Street called D.O.G., where for $12 you can get a massive burrito that’ll feed you for two meals.

  Other Cool Outdoor Adventures Here

  It’s $5 to skate in the ice rink at Teton Village or on the skating pond in Town Square (through the famous elk-antler arches) if you have your own skates (or $18, including the entry fee, to rent skates).

  You’ll need to cross-country ski, snowmobile, or dog sled to reach Granite Hot Springs, located south of town on Granite Creek Road, which is closed in the winter. It’s a 19-mile round trip ski to get there, but that’s the least expensive option (Skinny Skis rents Nordic skis from $40 a day; entry into the hot springs is $12) for this memorable day. Otherwise, you’ll need to throw down for a guided snowmobile trip (Teton Tour Company leads them starting at $231) or a dogsled outing (Jackson Hole Iditarod Sled Dog Tours has full-day trips to the hot springs from $460).

  Cache Creek Road

  It costs nothing to cross-country ski or fat bike along Cache Creek Road, a locals’ favorite trail that’s groomed in the winter and is a great biking and hiking trailhead in the summertime.

  Wilson Centennial Pathway

  Another excellent year-round option is the short multi-use Wilson Centennial Pathway in the nearby town of Wilson.

  Pro Tip

  Here’s a fun way to be a conscientious visitor to the area, while scoring a discount: Support Jackson Hole’s community radio station, KHOL 89.1, with a one-time donation of $60 or more, and you’ll get a member-benefit card for discounts to heaps of local businesses, including $2 off a D.O.G. burrito, 10 percent off Philly cheesesteaks at Cutty’s, 15 percent off at Cowboy Coffee, 10 percent off at classes at Inversion Yoga, and free cross-country ski rental for two people at Skinny Skis (that alone is worth $80).

  Megan Michelson is an Outside contributing editor who loves skiing but not how expensive it is. She prefers the strawberry waffle from Corbet’s Cabin, and her favorite line at Jackson Hole is the very steep and very fun Tower Three Chute off Thunder Chair. Other recent articles by Michelson include “Why My Family Replaced Thanksgiving with Campsgiving,” about a great decision; a description of a tiny, remote backcountry hut, “This Is Hands-Down the Coolest Airbnb in Colorado”; and, more help with costs, “Shred This Colorado Mountain for $11 a Day—Plus Other Incredible Ski-Resort Deals.”

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