The 35 Best Mountain Towns of 2024 in America—and Beyond
Perri Ormont Blumberg
39 min read
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If you're into hiking, skiing, snowboarding, mountain biking or other elevation-centric sports, you love a great mountain town. The very best mountain towns in the U.S. to live in or to visit stretch from New Hampshire's White Mountains to California's Sierras to the Alaskan Range with a whole lot of hills of all sizes in between. They are also great places to take it easy and just enjoy your picturesque surroundings. Offering world-class food and libations with unmatched ambiance, the perfect mountain town offers an ideal way to escape the daily grind and relax.
Our pick for the best overall mountain town is Steamboat Springs, CO, for its laid-back cowboy vibe and unbeatable, multi-season adventure offerings—from summer rafting, angling, and hiking to what's still the best glade skiing resort in the Rockies. With dozens of incredible spots from coast to coast (and beyond) to choose from, it was a tough call.
Below, we've rounded up our favorite mountain towns across the U.S.—plus a few extra far-flung destinations for good measure. If you're itching for a trip that blends the best of rugged and relaxed, the following top mountain towns with their epic trails, microbrews, lakes, and scenic views hit the perfect vibe and altitude.
Colorado's most genuinely Western mountain town, Steamboat Springs is simply hard to top in its Rocky Mountain beauty and unpretentious authenticity. Beneath the Sleeping Giant mountain, the 12,000-foot Flat Tops, and the sharp, solitary summit of Hahns Peak are working cattle ranches spread over undulating green hills that give the town a feeling of big-sky spaciousness.
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Downtown, with its century-old red-brick buildings, has an old-school soda fountain (complete with cream sodas and a jukebox) and shops like F.M. Light & Sons, a 100-year-old Western-wear store. Locals head to the pro rodeo on weekends to eat barbecued ribs and watch big names from all over the country compete.
If you're not in town for a race, marathon, or triathlon, chase thrills at Emerald Mountain, where you can conquer 8.8 miles of singletrack and soak up unforgettable valley views. Soothe sore quads afterwards at Strawberry Park Hot Springs, a set of secluded stone pools brimming with 104-degree mineral water. If you're visiting in late summer or early fall, trade the hotel for dispersed camping on Buffalo Pass and thank us later. Come winter, of course, Steamboat transforms into "Ski Town USA"—headlined by one of the world's top skiing and snowboarding resorts.
Getting There: Fly to Denver; drive three and a half hours northwest.
Best for Hikers and Whiskey Fans: Park City, UT
The outside world may associate Park City with glitz—the Sundance Film Festival, luxe ski resorts, restaurants helmed by big-name chefs—but ask locals what they love most and it's sure to be the trails. The hills that surround town hold an unprecedented 400 miles of loops, networks, and connector trails for hiking, trail running, or biking. Best of all, the easy-to-access trails virtually bring the Wasatch Range to you and then drop you off back by quirky Main Street.
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Based in Park City, the National Ability Center (NAC) is a leader in adaptive recreation, making outdoor adventures for individuals with disabilities possible. In 2023, the nonprofit debuted the McGrath Mountain Center, to teach adaptive skiing and snowboarding to all. Off-piste, people with disabilities can try programs like rock climbing and archery, too.
Nowadays, High West Distillery in nearby Wanship gets all the buzz, but you can have an equally superb time at Park Silly Sunday Market, a summertime fest of crafts, food, music, and a bloody Mary station with enough accoutrements to make your drink feel more like a paperweight. Since warmer weather means not worrying about being first in line to hit Park City's 9,300 skiable acres, reserve your stay at Washington School House. The hotel is a stone's throw from downtown, and also has a tranquil pool and an unreal free breakfast with bounty from the farmer's market.
Getting There: Fly to Salt Lake City; drive 40 minutes east.
Best Shoulder Season Escape: Aspen, CO
Sidestep its glitzy reputation, and it’s easy to be wooed by the real charms of Aspen—which have far less to do with celebrity sightings, South Mill Street boutiques, gallery hobnobs, or scoring reservations at the local Matsuhisa, and everything to do with what's hovering above and beyond all of that fuss. During ski season, Aspen’s four A-list alpine resorts (Ajax, Highlands, Buttermilk, and Snowmass) cater to every type of skier with unbeatable terrain. But America’s most famous mountain town is also a haven for virtually every other outdoor pursuit that should draw us to the big hills during those quieter (and, psst, less expensive) times here.
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From late spring through summer and deep into our favorite shoulder season of fall, Aspen is a hiking, cycling, climbing, paddling, camping, and horseback riding paradise. It’s Roaring Fork River-lined, Rocky Mountain-ringed spectacle offers some of Colorado’s most iconic crags—from the Maroon Bells and nearby 14er summits like nearby Castle Peak to a multi-day trek along the Four Pass Loop. An IMBA Gold Level Ride Center, Aspen is a mountain biking wonderland—starting at the edge of downtown on Smuggler Mountain Road leading to multiple loops, and atop Sky Mountain Park with over 50 miles of trails. All of it, of course, is served by world-class hotels, spas, dining, and other amenities at your fingertips.
Nestled in a remote valley that makes for a lovely, four-hour drive from Denver—but a far more convenient 10-minute commute from Aspen/Pitkin Airport, the former Ute summer hunting camp and late 19th-century silver boomtown (that went bust about 15 years later), got its first modest chairlift back in the 1930s. It would take a few more decades before Aspen’s downhill developments put it on the map as a ski mecca—eventually drawing generations of jet-set crowds. Today, Aspen is a year-round outdoor playground and cultural center that’s home to the beloved five-star hotel The Little Nell. It's got one of Aspen’s glitziest aprés-ski scenes and a wine cellar curated by sommelier Chris Dunaway that stocks over 20,000 bottles. Families looking to book a stay should consider Limelight Hotel Snowmass. It has an ice rink and the state's tallest indoor climbing wall. However you experience this town and its magical surroundings, Aspen’s legendary winter slopes and star-studded streets merely scratch the surface.
Getting There: Fly to Aspen/Pitkin County Airport, which is just a few miles from downtown Aspen. Eagle County Regional Airport (1.5-hour drive) and Denver International Airport (4 hours) are other options.
Best for Singletrack Warriors: Crested Butte, CO
The 130-year-old former coal mining camp of Crested Butte is nestled in a bowl of high pasture, a cul-de-sac formed by jagged mountains etched with hundreds of miles of Jeep roads and killer singletrack. Rent a dual-suspension mountain bike from Crested Butte Sports, and get a map marking fabled rides like 401, a 14-miler that starts near the ghost town of Gothic, climbs past Emerald Lake, and descends through helmet-high wildflowers. Alternatively, venture to Evolution Bike Park, which offers over 30 miles of lift-served singletrack, including the machine-built Psycho Rocks, which lives up to its stomach-churning title.
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For après-bike, head to Montanya Rum distillery. Turns out that rum ages best at altitude—especially when distilled with raw materials from a spring-fed aquifer. Sure, you could book a hotel, but if you're comfortable in the thin air, camping at Paradise Divide offers car camping at 11,250 feet and wildlife sighting you won't soon forget.
Getting There: Fly to Gunnison; drive 30 minutes north.
Best Great Lakes Getaway: Marquette, MI
Perched on Lake Superior, Marquette proves an excellent home base for the largest city in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula (UP). In the winter, Marquette Mountain becomes a hub for skiing, snowboarding, and snowshoeing, but the county really comes to life in the summer, when you can take on The Iron Ore Heritage Trail, connecting the downtown communities of Marquette County with the great outdoors, spanning 47 miles and suitable for two wheels or heels. The short trail to Thomas Rock more than pays its rewards with cinematic vistas of the Keweenaw Peninsula, Lake Superior, Lake Independence, Big Bay, and the remains of an old Ford sawmill below.
Looking for waterfalls? Step right up to Yellow Dog Falls, Warner Falls, or Big Pup Creek Falls. Swimmers can take a dip in the greatest of Great Lakes at Little Presque Isle Beach—an especially inviting stretch of coast along over 80 miles of Lake Superior shoreline—or in numerous smaller lakes in the area that are popular with paddlers and anglers, too. Count sheep at the Landmark Inn in downtown Marquette, or commute 40 miles up the coast to Big Bay, where you can stay at Big Bay Point Lighthouse Bed & Breakfast, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
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Getting There: Fly to Green Bay, Wisconsin, drive three-and-a-half hours northeast
Best Hill Country Hit: Fredericksburg, TX
A short drive from the cosmopolitan hubs of Austin and San Antonio lies Texas Hill Country. Amongst this plethora of hamlets and hills, Fredericksburg reigns supreme. Here, you’ll find more than 60 wineries, vineyards and tasting rooms in the area, as well as over 700 historically significant structures—most notably, Sunday Houses. These types of small homes built by German settlers were used on Sundays when families would head from their rural homesteads into town to get supplies, do business, and go to church services. Those German settlers—who first arrived in 1846—have a lasting legacy in eateries like Otto’s German Bistro and lodging like Behr Haus Bed & Breakfast. Visitors can learn about the region’s German history on a trolley excursion with Fredericksburg Tours.
Other worthy stops here include The National Museum of the Pacific War, a tribute to service members in the Pacific during World War II (including native son, U.S. Navy Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz), and Enchanted Rock, the second-largest granite dome in the United States and a Dark Sky International designated park. Conclude any day’s festivities with a “Proseccolina” at the recently opened Piccolina, which makes its signature drink with Prosecco and a scoop of freshly made Italian ice.
Getting There: Fly to San Antonio and drive one hour northwest. Or fly to Austin and drive one-and-a-half-hours west.
Best Far-Flung Favorite: Talkeetna, AK
Talkeetna may rise only a few hundred feet above sea level, but the peaks of the Alaska Range—Foraker (17,400 feet) and North America's highest, Denali (20,320 feet)—hover like white ghosts over the town's thick fringe of spruce trees. During summer, when, as locals put it, "the Gore-Tex is in bloom," Talkeetna bustles with international climbers gunning for some of the world's most formidable summits.
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“We love it,” says Alaska Mountaineering School owner Colby Coombs. “Instead of the usual crowd at the Roadhouse, you might end up sitting at a table next to five guys from Greece.”
Long hours of daylight mean no one's in too much of a hurry, and night tends to look a lot like day. Live music pours out of places like Mountain High Pizza Pie and the Village Park. After hours—whatever that means here—the scene becomes mellow and shifts to The Tavern at the Talkeetna Inn, a beloved dive bar. Starting in mid-May, catch the Denali Star Train, which departs from either Anchorage or Fairbanks and stops in Talkeetna, and enjoy jaw-dropping backcountry views and a revamped food menu with an emphasis on local ingredients.
Note to hikers: Talkeetna's immediate surroundings are so wild and full of bears that venturing off into the woods is actually discouraged. But long days allow you to do things the Alaska way, like catching a Talkeetna Air Taxi for a Denali flightseeing tour or hopping a floatplane into the Talkeetna Mountains wilderness for a guided hike or day of fishing on a remote lake.
Getting There: Fly to Anchorage; drive two and a half hours north.
Best Quick Urban Escape: Roscoe and Callicoon, NY
The Sullivan Catskills may be close to New York City, but you’ll feel like you’re on another planet in Roscoe—just 123 miles north of Gotham. Kittatinny Campgrounds is the place to go for an active day, either via whitewater raft or 3,000 feet of dual racing zip lines. Fly fishing enthusiasts will also enjoy the many offerings of nearby Trout Town (Beaverkill is top notch), which houses an entire museum devoted to the sport.
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Cap off your getaway by riding the singletrack at Pearson Park on Walnut Mountain to whet an appetite for round two of tastings at Roscoe Beer Co. or Tuthilltown Distillery, the maker of buzzy Hudson Whiskey. When comfort carbs are calling, there’s always Grizzly Bagels, for scratch-made bagels and various schmears.
For another Sullivan County gem in the Catskills just a 25-minute drive south of Roscoe, visitors to Callicoon, NY, can swap Trout Town, USA, for Borscht Belt nostalgia. Callicoon is an artsy town lined with galleries and craft stores that will make you feel far away from the stress of your inbox. Located by the Delaware River, the town lends itself to days of hiking and fly-fishing whilst keeping your eyes peeled for bald eagles, or having indoorsy fun. Think: treasure-combing at Lee Taylor Antiques and other shops along Main Street, or learning about the raw wildflower honey Pollinator Spirits at Catskill Provisions Distillery.
Grab a seat on the main deck or by the pool at Callicoon Hills Resort and dig into your copy of Wilderness Tales: Forty Stories of the Norther American Wild, in which these storied peaks make a cameo. For sleepy time, we also like the Western Hotel, housed in an 1852 Victorian mansion, with a superb bar and supper club on the premises.
Getting There: Fly to New York City, drive two hours north.
Best for Whitewater Adventure: Pagosa Springs, CO
Most come to Pagosa Springs for exactly the reason you'd guess. The Colorado town's famed hot springs—the world's deepest—are a worthy attraction, but so are the nearly 3 million neighboring acres of San Juan National Forest and the Weminuche Wilderness Area. Make your first pitstop the Turkey Springs Trail System, which is comprised of 14 interconnected singletrack routes with loops, rocks, short steep pitches, and side slopes. Hikers can hit a stunning stretch of the Continental Divide Trail here. If you're craving whitewater, head out on the San Juan and Piedra rivers. Or, take it easy enjoying nature at Pass Creek Yurt and wash off the day in a solar-powered shower.
Getting There: Fly to Durango; drive an hour east.
Best for Budding Ice Climbers: North Conway, NH
This New England jewel is surrounded by the 660,000-acre White Mountain National Forest and endless hiking and bike trails. In the warmer months, paddlers can ride the Saco River, where rafting, kayaking, and inner tubing are all exciting options. Come winter, North Conway is all about ice climbing—and home to some of the country's most stunning frozen waterfalls, including the famous Diana's Baths. Climbers of all levels can book guided trips or courses with the International Mountain Climbing School. Nearby Omni Mount Washington Resort puts you in the shadow of mighty Mount Washington, the northeast's largest peak. Or hole up at the Cranmore Inn Bed and Breakfast if you're looking to stay closer to town.
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Getting There: Fly to Manchester, NH; drive an hour and forty-five minutes northwest.
Best for Beer Fans: Bend, OR
When you’re thinking of nature in Oregon, chances are your brain is pulling images from this mountain town. Get out on trails like Green Lakes, Sparks Lake, and Big Obsidian Flow to soak in the great outdoors that is Bend.
If hiking isn’t your thing, or if you need a post-hike brew, you can also hit the Bend Ale Trail, a carefully plotted route that will allow you to sample some of the best microbreweries in the region. Before you call it a night after all that drinking and exercise, don’t forget to grab some candy and a flick from the only Blockbuster still in existence.
Getting There: Fly into Roberts Field Airport, drive half an hour to Bend. Fancy a road trip? Portland is only 3.5 hours away.
Best for Art Lovers: Santa Fe, NM
Part-ski town, part-cultural mecca stuffed with more world-class art galleries and museums than a small city perched above 7,000 feet could possibly fit, Santa Fe really does befit its “city different” nickname. East Coasters, beware of that altitude. The highest elevation capital city in the U.S., Santa Fe is home one of the loftiest ski areas in the country at Ski SantaFe, with a summit elevation scraping over 12,000 feet.
After you’re done cruising along some of the 86 trails (ski season typically runs November through the start of April), visitors can appreciate the Sangre de Cristo Mountains from a new but equally elevated perspective. That is, from the Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado Santa Fe, whose chic embrace will unwind you with its spa, Terra restaurant, and pin-drop quiet.
In warmer months, enjoy hiking or mountain biking trails or crank the adrenaline up even more with river rafting on the Rio Grande or Rio Chama. Whichever month you plot your visit, book a reservation aboard the Santa Fe Stargazer Train, equipped with live musicians and an on-board astronomer pointing out constellations. If you’ve got fishing enthusiasts in your posse, we recommend staying at Bishop’s Lodge and signing up for the unforgettable fly-fishing excursions.
Getting There: Fly directly to Santa Fe, or fly to Albuquerque, NM, and drive about an hour northeast.
More Mountain Towns We Love
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Perri Ormont Blumberg is a native Manhattanite who's lucky to have spent time growing up in the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York—far from Gotham’s madding crowd. When she's not continuing to explore Sullivan County and the Catskills' other peaks, she's looking forward to her next skiing or hiking trip in towns like Santa Fe, New Mexico and Hot Springs, Arkansas.
Laura Studarus is a travel writer with a taste for off-beat experiences, outdoor adventures, and passport stamps. During over a decade as a travel writer, she's lived large parts of this list by climbing the peeks of Zakopane in a dress, getting hit by a snowball in Grindelwald, and being moved to tears by the northern lights at Kirkjufell. She's probably fighting off jet lag with copious amounts of tea right now.
The daily Crossword was played 11,212 times last week. Can you solve it faster than others?The daily Crossword was played 11,212 times last week. Can you solve it faster than others?