Wasatch Daily

Utah Ski Conditions Today: Best Ride Window Before Tuesday’s Storm Push

Published February 23, 2026 5:34 am · 2 min read
Actionable timing Snow quality first Wind impact guidance

Utah Ski Conditions for Monday, February 23

Quick take: this morning offers a cleaner window for turns and easier travel before snowfall intensity ramps Tuesday into Wednesday.

Day Quality Rating

7/10 — ███████░░░

Solid early-day groomer and packed-snow setup, with a stronger storm signal building next.

What the Mountains Are Showing This Morning

  • Alta: Base depth around 89 inches, temperatures in the 20s°F, and light southwest wind in the latest observations.
  • Snowbird: Open for skiing and riding this morning; uphill travel is currently closed.
  • NWS (Alta area): Near 39°F today with southwest wind around 9 mph. Snow chances increase Tuesday, with accumulating snow Tuesday night into Wednesday.

Canyon Access & Timing Strategy

  • Best window: Early today through early afternoon.
  • Higher-friction window: Tuesday into Wednesday as snowfall and traction-control risk rise.
  • Plan: Front-load turns today and add drive-time buffer for the next storm cycle.

Practical Daily Gear Call

What to wear

  • Midweight base layer + breathable midlayer for morning cold.
  • Waterproof shell jacket and pants/bibs for increasing moisture and wind.
  • Warm insulated gloves, plus a dry backup pair for full-day laps.

Best ski choice today

  • Most skiers: All-mountain setup is the best call this morning.
  • If surfaces stay firm: Fresh edges help on steeper groomers.
  • If snow arrives earlier: Move to a wider daily driver (~95–105 mm).

Goggle lens tint

  • Early mixed light: Rose/amber low-light lens.
  • If sun pops out: Medium-VLT lens.
  • If snowfall thickens: High-VLT storm lens for contrast.

Bottom Line

Today is a good day to bank turns before the next stronger snowfall window moves in. If your schedule is flexible, ski earlier and travel earlier.

Sources: Alta weather & snow report, Snowbird current conditions, NOAA/NWS Alta-area forecast.