Castle Mountain Resort and Silver Mountain are genuinely similar mountains. If you're a beginner or intermediate skier planning a week-long holiday, either will keep you busy. The decision probably comes down to travel logistics and price rather than anything you'd notice on the hill.
Highlighted cells indicate the stronger result for each metric. Numbers are measurements — compare them directly.
| Castle Mountain Resort | Silver Mountain | |
|---|---|---|
Vertical Drop Height from top to bottom — more is a longer, bigger mountain feeling | 869m (2,851ft) | 776m (2,546ft) |
Summit Elevation How high the mountain reaches — higher tends to mean colder, drier snow | 2,275m (7,464ft) | 2,073m (6,801ft) |
Base Elevation Height of the base village — affects snow quality at the bottom of the mountain | 1,406m (4,613ft) | 1,297m (4,255ft) |
Annual Snowfall Average natural snowfall per season — more means better powder odds | 900cm (354in) | 838cm (330in) |
Trail Count Total marked runs — more variety over a week-long trip | 94 | 73 |
Lift Count Total lifts — more lifts typically means shorter queues and better mountain access | 6 | 7 |
Skiable Area Total groomed and patrolled terrain in hectares | 1,397ha (3,452ac) | 647ha (1,599ac) |
Beginner Terrain Percentage of trails rated beginner — higher means more options for new skiers | 30% | 20% |
Intermediate Terrain Percentage of trails rated intermediate — the core terrain for most holiday skiers | 30% | 40% |
Advanced Terrain Percentage of trails rated advanced or expert — higher means more challenge | 40% | 40% |
These resorts are more alike than different. The right choice depends more on location, price, and personal preference than measurable mountain stats.
Both resorts have comparable vertical drop — you'll get a similar length run at either mountain.
Both resorts receive similar annual snowfall — you can expect comparable snow conditions at either.
Castle Mountain Resort has a slight edge in beginner-friendly terrain, with a bit more dedicated green-run acreage.
Castle Mountain Resort is noticeably larger, with more trails to explore over a multi-day trip.
Both resorts sit at similar base elevations, so snow quality and preservation are comparable.
Castle Mountain Resort has more beginner-friendly terrain and is a lower-pressure environment for new skiers.
Castle Mountain Resort wins on the stats that matter most for experienced skiers — more mountain to explore over a full week.
Castle Mountain Resort is the better pick for beginners. It dedicates more of its mountain to green runs and easy terrain, which means less time hunting for appropriate slopes and more time building confidence.
Castle Mountain Resort (900 cm/year) and Silver Mountain (838 cm/year) receive similar annual snowfall. Neither has a meaningful snow advantage — other factors like aspect, elevation, and grooming matter more day-to-day.
Castle Mountain Resort is the larger mountain by trail count (Castle Mountain Resort: 94 trails, Silver Mountain: 73 trails). On a week-long trip, a bigger mountain means more variety and a lower chance of feeling like you've exhausted the terrain.
Both resorts offer a similar proportion of advanced terrain (Castle Mountain Resort: 40%, Silver Mountain: 40%). Expert skiers should look beyond percentages at the quality of the black runs, off-piste access, and whether there's lift-accessed backcountry terrain.
Castle Mountain Resort is generally the better family resort based on its terrain mix. More beginner-friendly slopes means children and less experienced parents have plenty of room to ski without feeling pushed beyond their comfort zone. That said, both resorts have established ski schools — check current program reviews before booking.
Other matchups featuring these resorts and their regional peers.