PeakScout aggregates weather, road, and snowpack data near Colorado ski resorts. This page documents the statutory framework, data sources, and critical limitations that govern how that information should — and should not — be used.
Snow depth shown on PeakScout comes from NRCS SNOTEL automated weather stations and Open-Meteo model output — neither is the resort's own daily snow stake measurement. Actual resort base depth, surface conditions, and grooming status can differ substantially. Always check the resort's official conditions page before purchasing lift tickets or planning your day.
Colorado's Ski Safety Act establishes a list of inherent risks of skiing and snowboarding that skiers and snowboarders expressly assume: variations in terrain, snow conditions, ice, moguls, bare spots, forest growth, rocks, stumps, and collisions with other skiers or objects. The Act also defines operator duties (trail marking, warning signs, lift maintenance) and skier responsibilities (reading all posted warnings, staying in control, yielding to downhill skiers). PeakScout has no ability to report on whether a ski area is fulfilling its statutory duties — that assessment requires on-mountain observation by qualified personnel.
The Passenger Tramway Safety Board regulates the design, construction, maintenance, and operation of ski lifts in Colorado. Lifts must pass annual inspections; the Board has authority to order closures for safety deficiencies. PeakScout has no access to lift inspection records, operational status, or incident reports. Lift status information displayed on PeakScout (where shown) is sourced from third-party feeds and may not reflect real-time conditions. Check the resort directly for current lift status.
Colorado landowners and public land managers who open land for recreational use receive statutory liability protection (CRS 33-41-103). This applies to ski areas operating on USFS permitted land and to public access areas. This protection applies to land managers — not to PeakScout, which is an information aggregator with no land management role. The statute does not limit PeakScout's separate disclaimer of liability for data accuracy or completeness.
CDOT provides real-time road condition reporting via its CoTrip system, including traction law (CRS 42-4-233) and chain law (CRS 42-4-232) status. PeakScout may display CDOT road condition data for informational purposes. CDOT bears no liability for road condition report accuracy under CRS 42-1-056(2). PeakScout likewise disclaims liability for CDOT data accuracy — conditions on mountain roads can change in minutes. Always verify at cotrip.org or call 511 before driving.
NRCS SNOTEL stations measure snowpack at fixed instrument sites — often in forest clearings or ridgelines selected for instrument access. A SNOTEL reading of 48 inches does not mean the ski resort base is 48 inches. Resorts measure base depth at specific groomed locations using their own snow stakes; those readings are published on resort websites and are the authoritative source for resort conditions.
What PeakScout snow data tells you
What PeakScout snow data cannot tell you
The Colorado Avalanche Information Center (CAIC) issues danger ratings for backcountry forecast zones. These ratings describe the hazard in uncontrolled terrain outside ski area boundaries. In-bounds resort terrain is actively managed by ski patrol through daily snowpack assessment, explosive mitigation, slope closures, and controlled release — practices that are entirely separate from and not reflected in CAIC zone forecasts.
If you are skiing or riding in-bounds, the resort's ski patrol determines avalanche hazard and manages terrain accordingly. Do not use CAIC data to evaluate the safety of in-bounds resort terrain.
If you are ski touring, sidecountry riding, or accessing terrain outside ski area boundaries (via gates or adjacent terrain), CAIC data is relevant — but the limitations described in the CO Backcountry Skiing Disclaimer apply in full. Accessing out-of-bounds terrain from a resort typically voids ski area liability protection and removes you from ski patrol rescue coverage.
Colorado's I-70 mountain corridor serves as the primary access road for the majority of the state's front-range ski resorts. Road conditions change rapidly during winter storms, and CDOT frequently issues traction requirements and chain laws on short notice.
Traction Law (CRS 42-4-233)
Requires all vehicles to have adequate tires for road conditions — all-wheel drive or four-wheel drive with winter tires, or two-wheel drive with chains/cables. Violations carry fines. The law applies to specific road segments and elevation ranges; check CDOT for the current applicable segment.
Chain Law (CRS 42-4-232)
Requires commercial vehicles and certain passenger vehicles to carry and install chains or approved traction devices when the law is active. Passenger vehicles with AWD/4WD may be exempt under specific conditions. Check CDOT and the Colorado State Patrol for current requirements.
PeakScout displays CDOT road data on a best-effort basis. This data:
I-70 west of Denver can close with little notice during heavy snowfall events. CDOT opens the Eisenhower/Johnson Tunnel as a chokepoint; closures here strand vehicles for hours. Always check cotrip.org or call 511 immediately before departure — not the night before.
PeakScout does not have data feeds from ski resort operations systems. The following resort-specific information is not available on PeakScout and must be obtained directly from the resort:
Which lifts are open, on wind hold, or under maintenance. Lift status changes throughout the day based on wind, mechanical issues, and patrol decisions.
Percentage of trails open, which specific runs are groomed, and which terrain is closed for avalanche mitigation or insufficient snowpack.
The resort's official base depth at designated measurement points — the industry standard for "how much snow is there." SNOTEL ≠ snow stake.
Whether snowmaking is active, which terrain is being supplemented, and how much of the base depth is natural vs. machine-made snow.
Temporary slope closures for avalanche mitigation blasting, injury accidents, or hazard marking. These change hourly and are only available on-mountain.
Lift ticket pricing, reservation requirements, parking capacity, and resort capacity limits. Check the resort's website directly.
Under the Colorado Ski Safety Act (CRS 33-44-109), skiers and snowboarders expressly assume the following inherent risks of the sport:
These risks exist regardless of the accuracy or inaccuracy of any information displayed on PeakScout. Skiing and snowboarding can result in serious injury or death even when conditions appear favorable based on data alone.
PeakScout and its operators expressly disclaim all warranties, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, completeness, timeliness, or fitness for a particular purpose of any information provided on this platform related to ski resort conditions, road conditions, snow depth, lift status, or terrain availability.
PeakScout is an information aggregation service. Data is sourced from third-party providers (NRCS SNOTEL, Open-Meteo, CAIC, CDOT CoTrip, NOAA) and displayed on a best-effort basis. PeakScout does not conduct field observations, does not employ ski industry professionals, and does not provide expert resort guidance. Nothing on this platform constitutes a safety recommendation or a substitute for the resort's official snow report, ski patrol communications, or professional ski instruction.
To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, PeakScout shall not be liable for any injury, death, property damage, or loss arising from reliance on information provided by this platform for ski resort planning or travel decisions.
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