As 2024 draws to a close, most of the 57 lifts installed this year are spinning over the holidays, a testament to hard work across the industry. The sheer number of installations fell slightly from last year but remains elevated from pre-pandemic. The business split nearly evenly between fixed and detachable lifts in 2024 with major projects coast to coast in both the United States and Canada.

As always, the Rocky Mountain states led the charge, with 24 ropeways completed across Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, Arizona and New Mexico. Deer Valley added a whopping five chairlifts (three of which will open this season) and Powder Mountain added four. The Rockies comprised nearly half the total market, followed by Canada and the Eastern US. New lift construction reached its second highest level in decades across Canada, with projects in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec. The midwestern states lagged, falling to just two new lifts on the heels of a bad snow year in 2023-24. The west coast was down modestly with zero projects in the Lake Tahoe region, three elsewhere in California, just one in Oregon and two in Washington.


Four detachable gondolas opened in 2024 – at Legoland New York, Big Sky, Montana; Wasatch Peaks, Utah and Grouse Mountain, British Columbia. That’s about normal for the post-covid era with three of those built by Leitner-Poma. Four bubble chairlifts also opened, all of which were six or eight packs. The number of detachable chairlifts declined from 29 to 22 and fixed grip chairlifts declined from 25 to 21. Little Chapman Hill in Durango, Colorado, added a cool platter lift, the only major surface lift this year. We’ll probably need to wait another decade for a new aerial tram following last year’s debut of the Lone Peak Tram.


This year was the second best for expansion lifts since the 2008 financial crisis, signaling resorts are looking to grow operations rather than simply replacing old lifts. Part of that is of course the Deer Valley East Village megaproject, encompassing five projects this year and many more to come.


Doppelmayr installed slightly more lifts than competitors Leitner-Poma and Skytrac but the Austrians’ number of projects declined the most from 2023. Partek, MND and SkyTrans fabricated no aerial lifts, leaving customers with a true duopoly in 2024.


Doppelmayr dominated the fixed grip market with 57 percent share while detachables were split exactly evenly between the two builders. Doppelmayr supplied fewer D-Line detaches this year, installing two big ones at Big Sky Resort and one each at Mammoth Mountain and Deer Valley. Signs point to more D-Lines in 2025.
Leitner-Poma built the only new lift of the year not at a ski resort – the Minifigure Skyflyer at Legoland New York, which opened in June. The short 10 passenger gondola features individually themed cabins and carries riders between the park entrance and the base of a hill.
One segment that grew strongly was used lifts, which tripled from three installations in 2023 to nine in ’24. As the cost of new lifts continues to rise, more operators are looking to high quality used equipment. In some cases the original manufacturer refurbishes and reinstalls, such as at Pleasant Mountain, Maine and Hunter Mountain, New York, while other ski areas chose to install used lifts themselves or hire a contractor.

Leitner-Poma designed everything from the second largest lift by vertical transport feet per hour (Grouse Mountain gondola) to the smallest at Legoland. Doppelmayr also completed a broad range of projects from the world’s longest eight seat chairlift at Big Sky all the way down to the short Aurora quad at Deer Valley. Skytrac continued serving the middle of the market with fixed grip chairlifts ranging in size from the largest at Powder Mountain’s Raintree expansion to the smallest at Mt. Ashland, Oregon.
Alterra bought the most new lifts this year – eight – followed by Boyne Resorts with six. Vail Resorts pulled back from 18 new lifts in 2022 to five in 2023 and just three in 2024, one of which was a relocation and another of which was manufactured in 2022 but not installed until ’24. The fourth largest operator of North American ski areas, Powdr, purchased just two lifts this year. Really the largest customer for lifts was independent ski areas, which collectively added dozens of lifts.
As we wave goodbye to 2024, we also say goodbye to 50 lifts that were retired. The average age of a lift removed from service in 2024 was 41 years old. The industry retired 11 Poma lifts, nine Riblets and seven Halls over the past year.
Announced installations for 2025 are pacing about 15 percent below the same time last year. That could be a sign of actual pullback or resorts are waiting longer to make announcements. Of course Deer Valley is an exception, where an additional eight-ish lifts are planned for 2025 with more to follow. Some ’25 installs are already under construction, including Big Sky’s Explorer Gondola and Alpental’s Chair 2. One strong area for 2025 is non-ski lifts, with projects announced in Colorado, South Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia that have nothing to do with sliding downhill.

2024 marked a milestone for me, as I finished visiting every public ski area in the United States and Canada. The 752nd and final spot was Moose Mountain, Yukon, which took thousands of miles and multiple days to reach in June. Many industry friends surprised me at the Salt Lake City airport on my way home and we celebrated in the terminal. I’ll continue documenting lifts in 2025, writing about project announcements and industry news. Thanks as always for reading Lift Blog and Happy New Year!













Peter- It has been one hell of a year in the lift industry. Thank you for sharing your passion and talents with us and keeping us up to date on all that is going on. Hope I get the chance to buy you a drink sometime. Happy 2025. Ryan in Denver
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Thanks for all your hard work on the blog Peter. All the best for 2025.
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Wow! You visited them all! That is so cool! I appreciate your travels and thorough reports and information. I worked for Keystone back in the Ralston Purina corporate ownership days. That was one of the first corporate owners of a US ski area to my knowledge. Lots of fun (ha ha) taking care of Yan, Heron and Riblet lifts. The first triple chair! The first detachable quad went in at Breckenridge at that time. We thought that lift was from outer space! Unbelievable. I enjoy reading your posts and thank you for your meticulous fact finding. Keep up the good work!
Tom Buzbee Westminster, CO
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Happy New Year! Thanks for your hard work.
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thank you Peter for all your hard work. You are an amazing resource for the entire industry and I hope you can continue for years to come
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Happy New Year, Peter, and thanks for the great synopsis of another fantastic year in the ropeway industry. The 752 milestone should be in the Guiness World Records book- Congratulations! Thanks for sharing your passion with us and enjoy your travels in 2025.
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Great work, excellent display of the data distributions. Happy New Year!
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Hi Peter,Congratulations
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Thank you so much Peter! It must be very tiring going to every one of those resorts! Thank you for updating us!
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Happy New Year Peter! Thanks for all your efforts and work to keep us all informed.
Wishing you a successful 2025.
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Lift Blog has certainly become the go to site for ski lift information and news. Great job on the year end summery!! It will be interesting to see how long this active lift building streak continues?? Especially now with a lot of lifts in the $10 to $20 million dollar range. Kind of funny when a $4 million dollar fixed grip lift sounds cheap??
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Great job on documenting the ski world in 2024! Good luck for 2025!
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Love this blog Peter! Can’t wait to see you get to Deer Valley and get pictures of Keetley and also get pictures of Madison 8!
Wishing you a successful year from Utah!
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Peter, thank you for the consistency. When skilifts .org died, I never thought the industry would get a better replacement. And run by one insanely committed man!
Thank you for your effort, it is very much appreciated.
Ryan from Mammoth
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great article and congrats on visiting every resort. One small correction, isnt the lift at sun valley also a d line.
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It is not. UNI-G.
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oh apologies i confused the 2 six packs
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i wonder why they went with d line for the 6 last year but not this year
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I don’t know how ski resorts fund these lifts, but I wonder if the higher interest rates over the past couple of years is leading to the slight decrease in numbers built. I imagine that some resorts may pay cash, but others probably do finance these I would think?
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Are you planning to take more photos on the Northwoods Gondola hence the new cabins?
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