Is Keystone a good mountain for beginners?

Making up 19 percent of 3,148 acres, the Keystone beginner skiing accounts for a nice chunk of the pie. Beginners will find they can get high up on the mountain and enjoy epic views of Keystone’s Independence Mountain, Keystone Peak and Wapiti Peak. Not every resort can offer beginner skiers this kind of high alpine experience.

Keystone Beginner Terrain

Beginners at Keystone will appreciate the “learning area” at the top of 11,640-foot Dercum Mountain. There’s also another area at the base area, featuring the Discovery chairlift and several magic carpets. But, from Decrum Mountain beginners can soak in the views and see more of what Keystone terrain has to offer. This learning zone is a designated “slow skiing” area, ensuring beginners feel safe and comfortable when learning new skills. This area features a magic carpet for “never evers” and a small chair lift, Ranger, for beginners with a little more experience under their belt. Ranger is a great chairlift to learn on.

Once beginners feel ready to ski longer novice trails, they can simply hop right on the Schoolmarm trail, which abuts the magic carpet and take that to the either the River Run or Mountain Home base area. From there they can get on either River Run’s gondola back to the top or Argentine to Montezuma Express, both routes take beginners back to the summit of Decrum Mountain. The Schoolmarm trail and the other green circle trails, like Schoolmaster and Silver Spoon, that surround it are all in a “slow skiing” area, so this section is great for learning, and it’s a great zone for kids, since there are fun and easy tree trails and mini camps along the way.

Keystone Ski School

Both kids and adults will love learning to ski with the help of Keystone Ski School. Never-evers will appreciate Keystone Ski School’s approach, since they ease you into skiing. Keystone Ski School recommends that the first day on skis should be a half-day, since it takes a bit of time to simply get used to the equipment. But, in a matter of days, beginner skiers will be able to ski most of the Keystone beginner terrain thanks to knowledgeable ski instructors and their proven method.

Test result4 out of 5 stars

Evaluated by Skiresort.info, the world's largest test portal for ski resorts.
The evaluation is done as follows


Beginners Keystone

Beginners will find many easy slopes on the front side of the mountain. The "Learning Area" with a double chair lift and people movers is located at the base area. The complete back part of the ski resort is not suitable for beginners.


Slope offering for beginners/beginner slopes

Blue slopes


Information for beginners

  • Easy and manageable slope offering, which is easy to achieve
  • Wide slopes
  • Beginner's area
  • Special slopes for slower skiers/beginners
  • Easy valley run
  • Practice lifts near the base
  • Practice lifts directly at the feeder lift in the ski resort

Ski schools on-site

  • Keystone Ski & Ride School

Is Keystone a good mountain for beginners?
Easy slope with people mover


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Is Keystone a good mountain for beginners?

Photo: © Liam Doran

At 3,148 acres, Keystone’s ski area is medium-sized by North American standards – bigger than that of its neighbour, Breckenridge, but smaller than Vail’s and Whistler’s.

By the standards of the biggest Alpine ski areas, however, it’s minute. The Espace Killy in France, which is home to both Val d’Isere and Tignes, boasts 24,000 acres and the Three Valleys is even bigger. Fortunately, Breckenridge is only 30 minutes drive away from Keystone, and Arapahoe Basin is even closer. If you buy the right lift ticket, you can ski in both for free, so day-tripping is always an option.

So: is Keystone’s ski area of only marginal interest? No – provided you’re a beginner or an advanced skier. Here’s why.

It has a top-to-bottom beginner’s run

In most ski resorts, beginners get to wobble about on a small section of nursery slopes at the bottom of the mountain, and only get a sense of skiing its full height once they’ve made significant progress with their technique.

But Keystone has Schoolmarm – a beginner-friendly trail which drops through 700 vertical metres (2300 vertical feet) from the top to the bottom of Dercum, the first of its three “mountains”.  It’s one of the longest beginner trails in North America – or the Alps, for that matter.

There are several easy intermediate trails to progress to after that – and then you can day-trip to ski the long, wide, easy groomers of Peaks 7 and 8 in nearby Breckenridge. All in all, it’s not a bad place to make your first turns on snow.

A51 is a great terrain park

Keystone has only one terrain park – A51 – compared to the five you’ll find in Breckenridge. But all the same, it’s a good’un – with different lines for different abilities, and well-shaped, well-maintained jumps. The ski school also runs classes to help first timers make the transition from skiing to jumping.

The cat-skiing is superb

For snowboarders and advanced skiers Keystone’s best feature is its cat-skiing, in the wide-open bowls and powder fields at the top of the ski area.

Of course, there isn’t always powder up there. In fact, with an average snowfall of around 228ins/5.80m, Keystone is less snowy than most other Colorado resorts. The terrain is perhaps a little tame for genuine experts, too. But after a dump – especially midweek, when most of the locals are at work – you’d be nuts not to head straight for it.

You can either go to Outback bowls gate at the top of Outback, and between 10.30am and 1.30pm pay $5 a time for a shuttle up the mountain, or join a morning with Keystone Adventure Tours which costs around $250 including lunch, a guide, and the chance to ski the best lines in the best snow across all the high bowls. On the right day, it can be an amazing experience (as Welove2ski discovered a few years ago). The runs are fairly short, but you get to ski multiple laps, until your legs are ready to explode. (One caveat: the guides are not instructors, so don’t expect to be taught how to ski powder.)

Bear in mind that there’s also some great bump-skiing and tree skiing on North Peak and the Outback. Welove2ski reader, John Grigg told us recently, “I had the best day of tree skiing I’ve ever had in Keystone a few years ago – absolutely incredible.”

Oh yes, and don’t forget Arapahoe Basin is nearby, with some seriously steep skiing on offer on its celebrated East Wall.

The intermediate-level skiing is good – but limited

Keystone’s groomed trails spread south from the base village over three peaks – Dercum, North Peak and the Outback. They’re not really separate peaks – more like spurs of a single, higher ridge. But they do offer several fast trails which drop straight down the  fall-line of the slope.  Once you get off the north face of Dercum, you’ll find most of them are steeper than the norm in Colorado too. During the week they’re more or less deserted, too.

As a result more confident intermediate-level skiers can have a blast here – for a couple of days. But after that, they’ll find themselves skiing the same runs again and again. If fast skiing on groomed trails/pistes is your thing, then Vail, Aspen or Whistler are better options in North America. Or resorts such as Val d’Isere, Tignes, Meribel, Courchevel and Val Thorens in the Alps.

Finally, don’t forget to have your photograph taken

There’s free photography on offer at the top of Keystone’s key lifts. The photographers scan our lift pass, snap away at you and your ski buddies – and then at the end of the day you’ll find the photos on your online EpicMix account. You can then build them into a online souvenir of your skiing day, which sounds a bit cheesy but is in fact really rather fantastic.

Continue Exploring Keystone

Is Keystone beginner friendly?

With green runs conveniently located at the resort base and at the top of Dercum Mountain, Keystone is a great option for beginners. Lessons often take place on the Discover slope, with 50 easy runs to progress on to.

Where is best to ski for beginners?

10 Best Ski Resorts for Beginners in the World.
Tignes, France. ... .
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Alpbach, Austria. Alpbach is one of the best places to ski for beginners because of its small nature and plenty of blue runs..

What is the easiest run at Keystone?

Schoolmarm – Green: Schoolmarm is the longest run in Keystone, about 3.5 miles of snowy goodness. Schoolmarm is the best ride for beginners; it starts at the top of Dercum Mountain and takes you all the way to the Mountain House base area.

What are the easiest Blues at Keystone?

Most of the Blue's on the front side of Dercum Mountain are pretty easy and groomed - The front side of Dercum Mountain is the where you take the lifts/gondalo up from River Run and Mountain House. You can also find some blue's on the back side (such as Mozart) that are also pretty good and groomed.