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Mountain Operations Jobs (NOW HIRING)

Director, Mountain Operations

Park City, UT ยท On-site

$84K - $120K/yr

The Director of Mountain Operations manages and provides leadership of the day-to-day operations of: Snowmaking, Grooming, Terrain Parks, Fleet Maintenance, and all-mountain construction (heavy ...

$118K - $140K/yr

The Director of Mountain Operations will support the management teams of Homewood. The Director of Mountain Operations will initially report to the Assistant General Manager alongside the Senior ...

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Mountain Operations information

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How much do mountain operations jobs pay per hour?

As of Jul 15, 2026, the average hourly pay for mountain operations in the United States is $24.15, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $15.38 and $27.64 per hour, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What is mountain operations?

Mountain operations refer to the management and coordination of activities related to mountain environments, such as ski resorts, mountaineering, or outdoor adventure activities. Roles often involve safety management, equipment handling, and environmental awareness, requiring skills like first aid, navigation, and sometimes certifications like avalanche training.

What jobs pay 4000 a week without a degree?

In mountain operations, high-paying roles such as experienced ski resort managers, heavy equipment operators, or specialized guides can sometimes earn around $4,000 weekly, especially during peak seasons. These positions often require extensive experience, technical skills, or certifications rather than formal degrees, and may involve long hours or seasonal work.

What is a Mountain Operations job?

A Mountain Operations job involves maintaining and managing the daily functions of a ski resort or mountain recreational area. Duties can include lift maintenance, snowmaking, grooming trails, and ensuring guest safety. Employees in this role often work in various weather conditions and may operate heavy machinery. It's a hands-on job that requires teamwork, problem-solving, and a strong understanding of mountain environments.

What are typical daily responsibilities for someone working in Mountain Operations?

Mountain Operations professionals are responsible for maintaining slopes, operating and servicing lifts and grooming equipment, managing snowmaking systems, and ensuring safety protocols are followed throughout the mountain environment. Daily tasks may include inspecting and repairing equipment, clearing hazardous areas, monitoring weather and avalanche risks, and coordinating with ski patrol and other departments. The work often involves early mornings, variable hours, and being outdoors in all weather conditions. Working closely with other team members, Mountain Operations staff play a crucial role in delivering a safe and enjoyable experience for all mountain visitors.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive in the Mountain Operations position, and why are they important?

To thrive in Mountain Operations, you need a solid understanding of terrain management, equipment operation, basic maintenance skills, and safety regulations, often supported by relevant certifications such as avalanche safety or snowcat operation. Familiarity with specialized tools and machinery like snow groomers, chairlift systems, and weather monitoring technology is essential. Strong teamwork, effective communication, and problem-solving abilities help you adapt to changing conditions and work efficiently with diverse crews. These capabilities ensure the safe, smooth, and efficient functioning of mountain recreation areas, directly impacting guest experience and operational success.

Do ski patrols get paid well?

Ski patrols are typically paid hourly, with wages varying based on experience, location, and season. Entry-level patrol members may earn modest pay, while experienced or supervisory staff can earn higher wages, often supplemented with benefits such as free lift tickets and training certifications like CPR and first aid.

What kind of jobs are in the mountains?

Jobs in mountain operations include roles such as ski resort staff, mountain guides, lift operators, maintenance workers, and safety personnel. These positions often require knowledge of outdoor environments, physical fitness, and safety procedures, and may involve working in remote or high-altitude conditions.
More about Mountain Operations jobs
What cities are hiring for Mountain Operations jobs? Cities with the most Mountain Operations job openings:
What are the most commonly searched types of Mountain Operations jobs? The most popular types of Mountain Operations jobs are:
What states have the most Mountain Operations jobs? States with the most job openings for Mountain Operations jobs include:
Infographic showing various Mountain Operations job openings in the United States as of July 2026, with employment types broken down into 1% As Needed, 81% Full Time, 13% Part Time, 1% Temporary, and 4% Contract. Highlights an 94% Physical, 3% Hybrid, and 3% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $50,239 per year, or $24.2 per hour.
Mountain Operations Director

Mountain Operations Director

MOUNTAIN CAPITAL PARTNERS LLC

Sandia Park, NM โ€ข On-site

Full-time

Posted 27 days ago


Job description

The Role

Sandia Peak Ski Area sits in the Sandia Mountains just east of Albuquerque โ€” close enough to a real city to make life easy, high enough to feel like its own world. It's a resort with deep roots in New Mexico and a lot of runway ahead of it. We're looking for a Director of Mountain Operations to run the mountain day to day and to lead the capital work that will shape what Sandia Peak becomes over the next decade.

This is a builder's job as much as an operator's. On any given week you might be troubleshooting a lift with your maintenance team, dialing in the snowmaking plan for a cold snap, sitting down with the U.S. Forest Service on a permit, and keeping a lift upgrade on schedule and on budget. If you're a mountain-ops professional who likes owning both the wrench and the project plan, this is a chance to put a lasting stamp on a storied resort.

As part of Mountain Capital Partners, you'll have the backing and the mandate to think long-term โ€” and the autonomy to lead.

About Sandia Peak โ€” Where New Mexico Learned to Ski

Sandia Peak sits in the Sandia Mountains about 35 miles northeast of Albuquerque, on Cibola National Forest land, with Southwestern skies and long views over the high desert. It's a community institution โ€” the ski area that first brought the sport to New Mexico โ€” with 35 trails, 300 skiable acres, and 1,700 feet of vertical served by three double chairlifts and a surface lift.

Backed by MCP โ€” which has invested more than $75 million across its resorts since 2015 in lifts, snowmaking, and other improvements โ€” Sandia Peak's next chapter is yours to lead.

The Opportunity

As Director of Mountain Operations, you'll partner with the General Manager and Mountain Capital Partners leadership to run the mountain at a high standard and deliver the capital projects that move Sandia Peak forward.

You'll build and lead the mountain operations team โ€” lift maintenance, snowmaking, grooming, and the departments around them โ€” while owning capital improvements from planning through execution, so the resort runs safely and reliably today and is positioned to grow tomorrow.


What You'll Own

Mountain Operations

  • Live and lead MCP's mission and culture โ€” growing the sport of skiing and giving people the freedom to ski.
  • Lead all mountain operations departments โ€” lift maintenance, snowmaking, grooming, lift operations, ski patrol, and vehicle maintenance โ€” with hands-on expertise, not just oversight.
  • Build, mentor, and develop a strong operations team; coach people into bigger roles and run a tight, safe, accountable crew.
  • Set department budgets, operating plans, and KPIs that ladder up to resort goals, and own the results.
  • Keep the mountain safe and compliant, including OSHA and ANSI B77 standards.

Capital Projects & Planning

  • Lead the planning and execution of capital improvement projects end to end โ€” lift replacements and upgrades, snowmaking expansion, terrain and infrastructure work.
  • Own scope, budget, schedule, and delivery; manage contractors, vendors, and outside engineers, and keep projects moving without dropping the ball on operations.
  • Partner with MCP leadership to turn the long-term growth vision into a sequenced, fundable, buildable plan.

Forest Service & Regulatory Partnership

  • Serve as the day-to-day operational liaison with the U.S. Forest Service โ€” Sandia Peak operates on Cibola National Forest land โ€” coordinating permitting, master development plan implementation, environmental compliance, and on-the-ground project execution.
  • Develop policies and procedures that reduce liability and create efficiencies across the operation.

What This Role Demands

  • An ownership mindset โ€” act like it's yours.
  • High agency โ€” you make things happen.
  • Hands-on technical credibility paired with the ability to plan and lead.
  • Exceptional leadership and communication.
  • Comfort navigating complexity: USFS coordination, capital projects, safety and compliance (OSHA / ANSI B77), and seasonal labor dynamics.

What We're Looking For

Required

  • Hands-on management experience in at least one of the following areas of ski area mountain operations: Lift maintenance, grooming, snowmaking, or vehicle maintenance
  • Lift maintenance experience to at least the level of an apprentice lift maintenance mechanic or electrician.
  • Experience with snowmaking.
  • Demonstrated project management ability โ€” planning, budgeting, and delivering projects on time and on budget.
  • Ability to work effectively with the U.S. Forest Service (or comparable land-management / regulatory partners).

Strongly Preferred

  • Experience leading large capital projects in a ski resort setting.
  • Lift maintenance experience to at least the Journeyman mechanic or electrician level.
  • Snowmaking experience to at least the Snowmaking Manager level.
  • Grooming experience.
  • Hands-on management experience across two or more mountain operations areas.
  • P&L / budget ownership experience.
  • Bachelor's degree or higher in business, management, engineering, or a related field.

Why Sandia Peak
  • Build something that lasts. You'll lead the projects that define the resort's next chapter, not just keep the lights on.
  • Real scope, real authority. Director-level ownership of operations and capital work, with MCP's backing behind you.
  • A place worth showing up for. 35 trails, big views, a strong community, and a city at the bottom of the hill.

If you know mountain operations from the ground up and you're ready to lead both the crew and the projects, we'd like to hear from you.

Working Environment/ Physical Activities: ย  An average of 40% of the workday is spent indoors in an office environment and 60% is spent outdoors in constantly changing weather conditions.ย  These percentages are an average.ย  They will fluctuate depending on the time of year.ย  50% of the workday is spent sitting, 25% is spent standing and 25% is spent walking.ย  These percentages are an average.ย  They will fluctuate depending on the time of year.ย  Lifting, pushing and pulling objects weighing up to 100 pounds.ย  Occasionally carrying objects up to 50 pounds.ย  Constantly using hearing, near and far acuity, depth perception, color and field of vision.ย  Occasional stooping, kneeling, crouching, crawling, reaching, handling and feeling.ย  Occasional exposure to fumes, odors and gasses.ย  Occasional exposure to mechanical hazards.ย  Occasional exposure to electrical, high exposed worksite and burns.