♥ Wyoming's Community Ski Mountain

    Antelope Butte Mountain Resort Wyoming

    The Mountain the Community Brought Back

    Revived by the people who love it. Wyoming's own community-owned ski mountain, back on the snow where it belongs.

    8,500+ ft

    Elevation

    ~25

    Ski Runs

    Dec–Mar

    Ski Season

    Nonprofit

    Community Owned

    SCROLL
    Always verify current operating status — check antelopebutte.org for current season dates, lift status, and ticket information before your trip.

    Wyoming's Comeback Story on Snow

    There's a specific kind of pride that comes with skiing a mountain your community brought back from the dead. Antelope Butte Mountain Resort in the Bighorn National Forest spent years closed — lifts silent, snowpack untouched, the runs going back to mountain. Then Wyoming did what Wyoming does: local people decided not to accept that outcome.

    Through a grassroots community fundraising effort, Antelope Butte was revived as a nonprofit operation — Wyoming's only truly community-owned ski mountain, run by people who ski it, for families who've been skiing it for generations. That ethos shapes everything: from ticket pricing to the volunteer culture you'll find at the base lodge.

    What you get at Antelope Butte isn't just a ski day. It's a reminder that some things in Wyoming are still done the old way — with neighbors helping neighbors and a collective refusal to lose something worth keeping. When you stay in a Wyo Stays Bighorn cabin nearby, you're part of that same spirit. Locally owned. Locally operated. Browse Bighorn Mountain cabins near Dayton or explore all Bighorn cabin rentals.

    The History of Antelope Butte

    Antelope Butte has been part of the Bighorn Mountains' winter culture for decades. Understanding its history helps you appreciate what the community chose to save.

    1960s

    Resort opens in the Bighorn National Forest — a regional ski destination for northern Wyoming

    1980s–90s

    Decades of operation serving Wyoming families, building the mountain's community identity

    2000s

    Resort closes after a period of financial and operational difficulty — leaving a void in the region's winter recreation landscape

    2019–2022

    Community fundraising begins. Nonprofit entity forms. Infrastructure restoration and federal permit work underway.

    Revival

    Antelope Butte returns to skiing — community-owned, nonprofit operated, and built to last

    Terrain at Antelope Butte Mountain Resort

    Antelope Butte offers terrain that suits intermediate and advanced skiers especially well. The mountain's character — steeper than you might expect, with genuine tree terrain — rewards skilled skiers and challenges those building confidence.

    🟢 Beginner0%
    🔵 Intermediate0%
    ⚫ Advanced0%

    Antelope Butte sits in a north-facing aspect that holds cold, dry powder exceptionally well after storms. Wind loading on upper-mountain terrain creates natural deposits that experienced skiers find long after the storm has passed.

    At 8,500+ feet, altitude is a real factor. If you're coming from lower elevation, start more conservatively than you think you need to. You'll be grateful for it by 2 p.m. when you've still got energy for one more run. For skiers looking to extend a Bighorn trip, nearby Meadowlark Ski Resort offers a complementary experience on the eastern side of the range.

    Insider Tips for Antelope Butte

    From people who've spent time in the Bighorns — here's what separates a good day at Antelope Butte from a great one.

    🕖

    Arrive Early on Weekend Days

    Antelope Butte draws passionate locals who show up when the lifts open. Getting there by 9 a.m. means first tracks on groomed runs and a relaxed start to your day.

    🌨️

    Check Snowpack, Not Just Forecast

    The Bighorns can be variable. A week without snowfall at lower elevations sometimes means excellent high-mountain snowpack. Check the resort's conditions report, not your weather app.

    💰

    Support the Mission

    Antelope Butte operates as a nonprofit. Consider a membership or season pass rather than day tickets — it directly funds infrastructure and keeps the mountain sustainable long-term.

    🧊

    Dress for 9,000 Feet

    Wind chill above treeline can drop the real-feel temperature 20°F below the forecast. What feels fine at the base lodge can be genuinely cold at the summit. Layer aggressively.

    🏘️

    Community Means Cash

    Bring cash. Like many community operations, the resort may have limited card processing at some points of sale. Coming prepared keeps things moving smoothly for everyone.

    🌲

    Tree Terrain After Storms

    Antelope Butte's forested runs hold powder 2–3 days longer than groomed trails. Arriving midweek after a weekend snowfall? The trees are where the goods are waiting.

    Getting to Antelope Butte Mountain Resort Wyoming

    Antelope Butte is in the Bighorn National Forest along US Highway 14, southwest of Sheridan. The approach road winds through high mountain terrain — allow extra time in winter and check wyoroad.info before departure.

    ~60 miles · 1.25 hrs

    From Sheridan, WY

    Take US-14 west through Dayton and up into the Bighorn National Forest. Burgess Junction is your landmark. Mountain driving in winter requires snowtires and patience on the switchbacks.

    ~65 miles · 1.25 hrs

    From Gillette, WY

    Take US-14/16 west toward Ucross, then US-14 toward the Bighorns. Burgess Junction is your waypoint. The approach builds significantly in elevation in the final 20 miles.

    ~85 miles · 1.75 hrs

    From Worland / Greybull

    US-16 east then US-14 — the western approach involves significant elevation gain. Plan for a longer drive and potentially slower conditions in full winter.

    What to Bring to Antelope Butte

    Essential Gear

    Helmet (required for tree terrain), waterproof outerwear rated below 10°F, thermal base layers in merino or synthetic, neck gaiter or balaclava, quality ski goggles with anti-fog lens, and hand warmers as backup. Wyoming cold is not casual.

    Vehicle Preparedness

    All-season tires are insufficient on mountain roads in January. Snowtires or chains are essential. Keep an emergency kit in your vehicle: blanket, extra food, water, jumper cables, small shovel. Highway 14 can close in severe conditions — wyoroad.info is your best resource before and during the trip.

    Food & Water

    Pack more food and water than you think you need. Altitude dehydrates quickly, and skiing hungry is skiing poorly. On busy days, the lodge can have lines — your own snacks in your pack keep the day moving on your terms.

    Antelope Butte Mountain Resort — FAQ

    Antelope Butte has been revived through community effort and has operated in recent seasons. Current operating status, lift conditions, and season dates should always be confirmed at antelopebutte.org before planning your trip, as schedules vary based on snowpack and operational capacity.

    Antelope Butte is in the Bighorn National Forest along US Highway 14, approximately 60 miles west-southwest of Sheridan, Wyoming. Access via Burgess Junction on US-14. The resort sits above 8,500 feet on the western slopes of the Bighorn range.

    Antelope Butte is Wyoming's only community-owned, nonprofit ski resort — brought back from closure through grassroots local fundraising. The mission is access, not profit. Ticket pricing is oriented toward Wyoming families, the culture is volunteer-driven and genuinely warm, and the experience feels more like skiing with friends than transacting with a corporation.

    Yes — the terrain mix leans toward intermediate and advanced, making it ideal for confident intermediate skiers wanting to push their ability. North-facing aspects hold excellent snow, and the tree terrain offers a natural next step for skiers ready to leave groomed runs behind.

    Wyo Stays — a licensed, insured Wyoming vacation rental brokerage — manages cabin properties in the Bighorn Mountains and Sheridan County area that serve as excellent base camps for an Antelope Butte ski trip. Book direct at wyostays.com and skip the Airbnb and VRBO service fees.

    Stay in the Mountains You're Skiing

    Our Bighorn cabin rentals put you minutes from Antelope Butte. Locally owned, locally operated — just like the mountain itself. Book Direct — No Channel Fees.

    View Bighorn Mountain Cabins

    Wyo Stays · Licensed Wyoming Vacation Rental Brokerage · 155 W Brundage St, Sheridan WY

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