Winter Park Daily Snow

By Joel Gratz, Founding Meteorologist Posted 1 day ago May 5, 2025

Late-season storm from Monday to Wednesday

Summary

A late-season storm will bring snowflakes from Monday to Wednesday, and the best chances for powder will be on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Update

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Conditions

  • New Snow (Mid-Mountain snow stake)
    • 0” Sunday 5:00 am to Monday 5:00 am (24 hours)
    • 0” Sunday 5:00 pm to Monday 5:00 am (12 hours)
  • Last Snowfall
    • 2” Sunday Night (Apr 27-28)
  • Snowpack
    • 75% of the 30-year average
  • Terrain
    • 6 of 24 lifts
    • 65 of 171 trails

Forecast

While the Winter Park side is closed, the Mary Jane side will be open ALAP (As Late As Possible).

A slow-moving storm will bring snow to Winter Park from Monday through Wednesday.

  • Monday will be drier in the morning, then a wave of snow showers will move through on Monday afternoon and evening. This wave should deliver 1-3 inches of accumulation.

  • Tuesday could start with some fresh snow (from Monday night), then intense snow should fall from midday Tuesday through Tuesday night. Accumulations should be 3-7 inches on Tuesday afternoon with fun afternoon powder, and then another 3-7 inches should accumulate on Tuesday night.

  • Wednesday morning should have soft/fun/powder conditions due to the snowfall Tuesday afternoon plus the snow on Tuesday night. This will likely be the final powder morning/day of the season - enjoy!

  • Thursday through Sunday, May 11, should offer typical spring conditions with highs in the 40s and afternoon showers possible each day.

Tap below to see our forecasts:

My next update will be later this week with a storm wrap-up and a seasonal wrap-up as well.

Thanks for reading!

JOEL GRATZ
Meteorologist at OpenSnow.com

About Our Forecaster

Joel Gratz

Founding Meteorologist

Joel Gratz is the Founding Meteorologist of OpenSnow and has lived in Boulder, Colorado since 2003. Before moving to Colorado, he spent his childhood as a (not very fast) ski racer in eastern Pennsylvania.

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