Liberty Mountain Resort is located in the mountains of Southern Pennsylvania. Liberty Mountain has trails for all ability levels on the front and backside of our mountain.
Epic Passes
Mountain Stats
Highest Elevation
Base Elevation
Skiable Terrain
Average Snowfall
Lifts
Terrain Parks
Trails
Beginner Terrain
Intermediate Terrain
Advanced Terrain
Mountain Stats
TerrainTerrain Type (Beg/Int/Adv)TrailsLifts
Skiable Terrain: 100 acres (40 hectares)
Terrain Parks: 3
Beginner: 35%
Intermediate: 40%
Expert: 25%
16 Trails8 LiftsElevationVerticalAverage SnowfallWinter Season
Base Elevation: 570 ft (170 m)
Summit Elevation: 1,190 ft (360 m)
Vertical Drop: 620 ft (190 m)31 inches (79 cm)Mid-December to Mid-March
Fun Facts
- Longest Run: Dipsy Doodle, 5,200 feet (1,585 m)
- Liberty Mountain has 100% (or 100 acres) of snowmaking coverage. All the water is drawn from our snowmaking pond located in our base area, converted into snow over the winter, and then returned naturally to the water table and pond in the springtime when the snow melts.
- All trails are 100% lit for night skiing daily.
- The mountain has 4 lodges: Highland Lodge, Alpine Lodge, Boulder Ridge, and South Pole.
- Liberty Mountain has 3 terrain parks: West Side, Vertigo, and Adventure Alley.
- Michelle Obama learned to ski at Liberty Mountain with its unique location close to DC.
- Liberty Mountain has a famous YouTube video of Ratatouille the Snowboarding Opossum with over 1 million views.

Snowmaking
Liberty Mountain has one of the best snowmaking systems in the ski industry! 100% of our terrain is covered by snowmaking, so as soon as we have cold temperatures, we can have snow all winter long, even if we get no natural snow at all.
Thanks to snowmaking upgrades in the 2019 off-season, we will be able to increase our water flow from 4,500 to 7,300 gallons per minute! Which means, at the ideal snowmaking conditions of a 20-degree wet bulb...
- We pump up to 7,300 gallons of water per minute
- Each gallon of water weighs 8.33 lbs
- Multiply the two (gals per min X weight) you get 60,809 lbs of water being turned into snow per minute
- Divide that number by 2,000 (# of pounds in a ton) you get 30.4 tons of snow per minute
- Multiply that by 60 (minutes per hour) that's 1,824 tons of snow per hour!
