Prime Ski Properties Skyrocket 150% Over 20 Years, a New Report Says


A ski home has been a favorite getaway for the ultra-rich ever since people started strapping sticks to their feet, but over the past two decades, they’ve become a lot more than just seasonal escapes—they’re serious lifestyle investments that increasingly offer year-round activities. According to the latest Savills Ski Report, which marks 20 years of tracking the global ski market, prices for prime ski properties have jumped a whopping 150 percent since 2006.

Switzerland has stayed steady through it all. Ski homes in the Alpine country are up 7 percent in the past year and 20 percent over the last five, and over 20 years they’ve nearly doubled in value. Resort towns long popular with aristocrats and jetsetters, such as Gstaad and St. Moritz, still draw buyers looking for privacy and stability, with ultra-luxury chalets in Gstaad selling for around €51,500 per square meter—about $55,000 per square foot.

ski home property prices surge

Prime ski property prices have surged 150% over the past 20 years.

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The U.S. market is equally dramatic. Short-term numbers may look flat, but over 10 years, values have jumped 84 percent, and over 20 years, they’ve soared by 228 percent. Aspen continues to lead the pack, with prime homes averaging roughly $3,750 per square foot and ultra-prime homes going for around $7,400 per square foot. 

To put that into perspective, a contemporary log cabin on what’s known as Aspen’s Billionaire Mountain hit the market earlier this year for $45 million, while a 6,180-square-foot home sold last year for a record $66.5 million, or $10,761 per square foot. As it turns out, the most expensive home currently on the U.S. market is in Aspen: Stewart and Linda Resnick’s Little Lake Lodge, a 74-acre compound with a 19,000-square-foot mansion listed for $300 million, an amount that breaks down to a staggering $15,790 per square foot.

Even with a brutal 10 percent dip last year, France is also seeing strong growth. Five-year gains are still a solid 31 percent, and 10-year gains are 58 percent, while the 20-year growth figures skyrocketed by 197 percent. High-altitude resorts like Val d’Isère and Courchevel 1850 are especially popular, thanks to reliable snow and international prestige. 

Luxury listings in Courchevel 1850 illustrate the scale. They include a 3,123-square-foot chalet on the market for €8.4 million (about $9.5 million), which translates to $3,043 per square foot, and an enormous 10-bedroom spread listed for €36 million ($41.8 million), or $6,934 per square foot.

ski home property prices surge

Aspen remains the global leader for ultra-prime ski homes, with average prices topping $7,400 per square foot.

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Even with some ups and downs, prime-property values are still 27 percent above pre-pandemic levels, and demand is surging as wealthy individuals look for lifestyle escapes that double as investments, remote work makes mountain living more practical, and high-altitude, snow-reliable resorts offer long-term resilience against climate volatility. 

“Despite continued economic uncertainty, prime ski property markets have proven resilient,” says Kelcie Sellers, associate director at Savills World Research. With more than 366 million skier visits worldwide in the 2024–25 season, owning a luxury ski home in Aspen, Val d’Isère, or Gstaad isn’t just about the perfect powder—it’s also about securing a prime piece of property in a market that just keeps climbing.