If you're planning a trip to the Colorado mountains — especially a ski trip — Breckenridge is probably at the top of your list. And it should be. It's one of the best ski towns in the country.
But here's what most visitors don't consider: you don't have to stay in Breckenridge to ski Breckenridge. Fairplay, a quiet mountain town 45 minutes south over Hoosier Pass, has been the locals' alternative for years. Same mountains, same skiing, completely different price tag — and honestly, a better experience when you get home at the end of the day.
The Cost Difference
Let's start with the obvious. Breckenridge is a resort town, and everything is priced accordingly.
| Breckenridge | Fairplay | |
|---|---|---|
| Hotel / Cabin (winter) | $300–$700+/night | Significantly less |
| Dinner for two | $80–$150+ | $30–$60 |
| Coffee | $7–$9 | $4–$6 |
| Parking at resort | $20–$40/day | Free (drive in) |
| Groceries | Resort markup | Normal prices |
A 3-bedroom cabin in Fairplay with a hot tub, barrel sauna, full kitchen, fire pit, and mountain views costs a fraction of what you'd pay for a basic hotel room in Breckenridge. Split that among a group of 4–6, and the per-person math is dramatic. You could ski an extra day with the savings — or just keep the money.
The Experience Difference
Staying in Breckenridge
Breckenridge is walkable, lively, and convenient. You can stumble from the bar to your hotel. The town is gorgeous. But it's also crowded, expensive, and loud. Hotel rooms are small, walls are thin, and you're sharing the experience with thousands of other tourists. After a big ski day, you're in a 400-square-foot room with nowhere to decompress.
Staying in Fairplay
Fairplay is the opposite of a resort town. Population 750. No stoplights. At 10,000 feet with zero light pollution, the night sky alone is worth the trip. After skiing, you drive 45 minutes through one of the most scenic passes in Colorado and arrive at a private cabin where you can soak in a hot tub, fire up the sauna, cook dinner in a real kitchen, and sit around the fire pit. Nobody is competing for a restaurant reservation or parking spot.
The Drive: Is It Worth It?
The drive between Fairplay and Breckenridge is 24 miles over Hoosier Pass on Highway 9. It takes about 45 minutes and it's one of the most beautiful drives in Colorado — mountains on both sides, aspens lining the road, open meadows in the valley.
In winter, the pass is well-maintained and regularly plowed by CDOT. You'll want AWD or 4WD with snow tires (required by Colorado's Traction Law on mountain passes), and you should add extra time after major storms. But for 99% of ski days, the drive is smooth, scenic, and relaxing.
45 minutes is the average Denver commute. Except instead of I-25, you're driving over a 11,539-foot mountain pass with panoramic views. And instead of going to an office, you're going skiing.
Access to More Resorts
Here's something Breckenridge visitors miss: staying in Fairplay puts you within striking distance of five major ski resorts, not just one.
| Resort | From Fairplay | Pass |
|---|---|---|
| Breckenridge | 45 min | Epic |
| Keystone | 55 min | Epic |
| A-Basin | 55 min | Ikon |
| Copper Mountain | 60 min | Ikon |
| Loveland | 60 min | Independent |
If you stay in Breckenridge, you'll probably ski Breckenridge every day because it's right there. Stay in Fairplay and you can mix it up — Breck one day, Keystone's night skiing the next, A-Basin for expert terrain, Copper for a locals' vibe. Every resort is roughly the same drive.
Best of Both Worlds
The smart play is to enjoy Breckenridge's town — the restaurants, the bars, the energy — without paying to sleep there. Ski all day, grab après-ski drinks at the Gold Pan Saloon or dinner at Aurum, then drive home to Fairplay. You're in the hot tub under the stars by 9 PM.
You get Breckenridge's best asset (the skiing and the town) without its worst (the prices and the crowds at bedtime). And you wake up to silence, mountain views, and coffee on the deck instead of a hotel hallway.
Who Should Stay in Fairplay?
Fairplay is perfect for you if...
Groups & families: You need space. A 3-bedroom cabin with a full kitchen beats two cramped hotel rooms every time. Kids can run around. Adults can spread out.
Budget-conscious skiers: You want world-class skiing without the world-class lodging bill. Cook breakfast at the chalet, pack lunches, and put the savings toward extra lift tickets.
People who want the real Colorado: You came to the mountains for the mountains — not for a resort lobby. Fairplay is a genuine, tiny mountain town surrounded by 14ers, trout streams, and dark skies.
Multi-resort trips: You have an Epic or Ikon Pass and want to ski several resorts without relocating. Fairplay is central to all of them.
Breckenridge might be better if...
You don't want to drive at all: If walking to the lifts is non-negotiable, Breckenridge delivers that. You'll pay for it, but it's undeniably convenient.
You want nightlife: Breckenridge has a bar and restaurant scene that Fairplay (population 750) simply doesn't. If your trip is about going out, stay in town.
Short solo trips: If you're by yourself for a quick 2-night ski trip and don't need space, a Breck hotel makes sense. The cabin advantage kicks in most with groups.
The Bottom Line
Breckenridge is a great place to ski and a fun town to visit. But staying there is expensive, crowded, and you're paying a premium for convenience you might not even need. Fairplay gives you more space, more amenities, more access, and a better end-of-day experience — for significantly less money.
The 45-minute drive is the trade-off. And once you've made it — windows down, mountains everywhere, hot tub waiting — you'll wonder why you ever considered paying resort prices to sleep in a box.
The Fairplay Advantage
Skyfall Chalet sleeps 6 with hot tub, barrel sauna, fire pit, and full kitchen — all 45 minutes from Breckenridge. Book direct and save 10–15%.
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