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Aspen sits at 7,908 feet in the Roaring Fork Valley, surrounded by the White River National Forest and the Elk Mountain range. It started as a silver mining camp in the 1880s, became a ski town in the 1940s, and has spent the decades since building one of the most concentrated combinations of outdoor access, cultural programming, and fine dining found anywhere in the American West.

What makes it worth understanding before you arrive: Aspen is compact. The pedestrian mall, the gondola base, the best restaurants, and most of the Frias Properties inventory are all within walking distance of each other. That geography shapes everything about how a visit here feels.

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Summer in Aspen

June through September

Aspen's summer season runs roughly Memorial Day through Labor Day, with September extending the calendar for visitors who prefer cooler temperatures, thinner crowds, and the early shift of the aspens turning gold. The four mountains that define winter here become a network of lift-served hiking and biking terrain. The cultural calendar fills with festivals that draw audiences from around the world. The restaurants are fully staffed and fully booked.

Most visitors underestimate how much there is to do. A week in Aspen in July is not a slow week.

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maroon bells fly fishing

Why visit Aspen in summer

Aspen in summer belongs to a specific kind of traveler — and often several of them in the same group. It works best for:

  • Hikers and trail runners who want lift-served access to above-treeline terrain without a long approach
  • Families looking for a mountain town where kids have real things to do: bikes, gondolas, rivers, and room to roam
  • Culture seekers drawn by the Aspen Music Festival, the Ideas Festival, and a gallery and dining scene that would hold its own in any major city
  • Fly fishers with the Roaring Fork and Fryingpan Rivers — two of Colorado's Gold Medal fisheries — right outside the door

A few things worth knowing:

  • Aspen averages more than 300 days of sunshine per year; summer afternoons are warm, evenings are cool, and afternoon thunderstorms are common in July and August — plan outdoor activities for mornings
  • The Maroon Bells require a timed entry reservation in summer; book early
  • The Music Festival runs late June through August, and specific performances sell out

Summer activity guide

Getting to Aspen

Aspen sits at the end of State Highway 82 in the Roaring Fork Valley, roughly three hours from Denver by car in summer and four or more in winter with traffic and road conditions. The drive over Independence Pass,  open roughly May through late October, is one of the more dramatic mountain passes in Colorado and worth the extra time if conditions allow.

By air — closest airports:

  • Aspen/Pitkin County Airport (ASE) — 3 miles from downtown Aspen. Served by major carriers with seasonal direct routes from several U.S. cities. The shortest, most convenient option when available.
  • Eagle County Regional Airport (EGE) — 70 miles from Aspen via I-70 and Highway 82. A reliable alternative with broader carrier access.
  • Grand Junction Regional Airport (GJT) — 127 miles from Aspen via I-70 and Highway 82. Located on the warm Western Slope of Colorado, GJT is a safer bet for limiting weather impacts.
  • Denver International Airport (DEN) — 220 miles from Aspen. The widest range of routes and connections; ground transportation takes approximately four hours.

Ground transportation:
Complimentary airport transfers are available for our guests*. Frias Properties' concierge can connect vacation rental guests with vetted ground transportation providers from any of the three airports.

*not available for Independence Square Hotel and Owl Creek Homes guests

Dining in downtown Aspen

The downtown area holds a mix of long-standing locals' favorites and newer dining rooms drawing chefs with serious credentials. Reservations matter at the top tier, especially in peak winter and summer weeks.

The Frias concierge team makes dining reservations for guests across both seasons. It is one of the most-used services we offer, and for good reason.

Aspen Area Dining Guide

Shopping in Aspen

The downtown mall runs along Galena, Hyman, and Cooper Avenues and contains the full range — from independent galleries and local outfitters to the flagship stores you would expect in a resort town of Aspen's standing.

The mix has shifted over the years, but the independent art gallery presence remains stronger here than in most comparable mountain towns.

Aspen shopping guide

Winter in Aspen

December through April

Aspen's ski season typically opens in late November and runs through mid-April. The town's energy peaks over the holidays and again during spring break, but the quieter weeks of January and early February are when conditions are often at their best and the mountain feels most like it belongs to the people actually skiing it.

Aspen operates three mountains within the city's immediate orbit — Aspen Mountain, Aspen Highlands, and Buttermilk — plus Snowmass Village, which has its own character and its own page. A single Ikon Pass or lift ticket covers all four.

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aspen ajax skiing things to do in aspen

Why visit Aspen in the winter

Three mountains, one town, and a social calendar that runs from Thanksgiving through mid-April. Aspen winter draws:

  • Expert and advanced skiers who want Aspen Mountain's ungroomed pitch and the Highland Bowl's hike-to terrain without lift lines that match the difficulty
  • Families with mixed abilities — Buttermilk is one of the most beginner-friendly mountains in Colorado, and it sits 15 minutes from downtown
  • Non-skiers who still want the full mountain town experience — the dining, the après, the ice skating, the Nordic trails, and the general sense that something is always happening
  • Guests who care about timing —  mid-January and early February are often the best snow and the thinnest crowds; holidays and spring break are the peaks in both price and energy

A few things worth knowing:

  • Aspen Mountain (Ajax) has zero beginner terrain — it starts at intermediate and gets steeper from there
  • The Silver Queen Gondola loads one block from Independence Square Hotel and is within walking distance from most downtown Frias properties
  • The X Games take over Buttermilk each January, a genuinely great spectator event and free to watch
  • A single Ikon Pass or lift ticket covers all four Aspen Snowmass mountains

Winter activity guide

Plan your Aspen visit with Mariya

Frias Properties guests have direct access to our concierge team. Mariya and her team handle dining reservations, lift ticket and ski rental pre-purchase, event bookings, childcare referrals, and the kind of local knowledge that takes years to accumulate. If you have a question about what to do, where to eat, or how to get somewhere, start here.

Contact our concierge team

Aspen, Colorado FAQs

How far is Aspen from Denver?

Aspen is approximately 220 miles from Denver — roughly three hours by car in summer via I-70 and Highway 82. In winter, factor in mountain driving conditions and plan for four hours or more. Flying into Aspen/Pitkin County Airport (ASE), just three miles from downtown, eliminates the drive entirely when routes are available.

What is there to do in Aspen?

More than most mountain towns can offer in a week. In summer: lift-served hiking, fly fishing on Gold Medal rivers, the Aspen Music Festival, and a dining and gallery scene that would hold its own in any major city. In winter: three distinct ski mountains, the X Games, Nordic trails, and a social calendar that runs Thanksgiving through mid-April. Our summer and winter guides go deeper.

When does it snow in Aspen?

Aspen typically sees its first significant snowfall in October, with the ski season opening in late November. Peak snowpack is January through March. The mountains usually close by mid-April, though spring conditions on upper terrain can be excellent well into that month.

What is the altitude of Aspen?

Downtown Aspen sits at 7,908 feet above sea level. The ski terrain goes considerably higher — the top of Aspen Highlands reaches 12,392 feet. First-time visitors should plan for altitude adjustment: hydrate well, take it easy your first day, and be aware that alcohol affects you faster at elevation.

Is Aspen on the Ikon Pass?

Yes. All four Aspen Snowmass mountains — Aspen Mountain, Aspen Highlands, Buttermilk, and Snowmass — are included on the Ikon Pass. Pass holders receive a set number of days depending on their pass tier. Single-day lift tickets are also available and can be purchased in advance through the Aspen Skiing Company.

How do I get to Aspen?

The most convenient option is flying directly into Aspen/Pitkin County Airport (ASE), three miles from downtown. Eagle County Regional Airport (EGE) is 70 miles away and offers broader carrier access. Denver International Airport (DEN) is 220 miles from Aspen and roughly four hours by ground. Guests staying at Independence Square Hotel receive complimentary airport transfers from ASE — our concierge team can arrange ground transportation from EGE and DEN.

Is it better to stay in Aspen or Snowmass?

It depends on what kind of trip you're planning. Staying in Aspen puts you on the pedestrian mall — walkable to restaurants, galleries, and the Silver Queen Gondola base. Snowmass Village offers ski-in/ski-out access to the largest of the four mountains, more space, and a quieter pace. Many guests split a stay between both. Frias Properties manages properties in both locations — our team can help you choose Aspen or Snowmass based on your group size, budget, and priorities.

Why is Aspen so expensive?

A combination of factors: limited housing inventory in a geographically constrained mountain valley, a world-class ski resort, year-round cultural programming, and decades of reputation that attract high-demand visitors. That said, Aspen has more range than its reputation suggests. Frias Properties manages options from well-appointed condos to six-bedroom private homes, and our team can help match your group to something that fits your budget.