SAM Magazine—Granby, Colo., Aug. 19, 2025—With the addition of dozens of new resorts, Indy Pass will go back on sale to the public Aug. 28, 2025. Indy halted sales of its 2025-26 pass in March after reaching its cap following a 10-day sales period. The company will also launch a new Learn-to-Turn pass that includes three total days of bundled lift access, rentals, and lessons for $189 on Aug. 28.
“Indy Pass is the ‘ski pass with purpose,’” said Indy Pass director Erik Mogensen. "That purpose is keeping skiing independent and accessible at all costs. We are charging forward with new resorts and programs that get people making turns at independent mountains, and there is more to come."
Indy reports that it will exceed the 250 resort guarantee it made this spring. A full list of the added partners is expected when sales reopen in August. In the interim, Indy said it has added dozens of new partner resorts in the United States, Canada, Austria, France, Slovenia, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Scotland, and Japan.
The new partners have added enough resort-to-pass-holder capacity to the Indy network to allow for another 2025-26 pass sales window, according to the company. Indy said the restricted sales strategy is aimed at managing the risk of overselling and creating crowding issues.
The pass will go on sale to the waitlist on a first-come, first-served basis before opening to the general public until capacity is reached.
The new Learn-to-Turn pass will be available starting in the preseason and throughout the winter, with an eye toward growing new skier and rider participation. The pass includes three total days of skiing/riding, lessons, and rental equipment for $189. Indy has not confirmed participating resorts yet.
“Everyone in skiing is searching for the holy grail of skier development, and Indy Pass will attempt to move the needle by keeping it cheap, simple, and widely accessible,” said Indy Pass founder Doug Fish. “We’re in the process of recruiting Indy resorts to participate and look forward to growing this program in the coming years.”