{"id":861,"date":"2025-07-21T20:27:51","date_gmt":"2025-07-21T20:27:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/xfernfts.com\/?p=861"},"modified":"2025-07-22T13:50:27","modified_gmt":"2025-07-22T13:50:27","slug":"mountain-collective-adds-whiteface-new-york-for-2025-26-season","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/xfernfts.com\/index.php\/2025\/07\/21\/mountain-collective-adds-whiteface-new-york-for-2025-26-season\/","title":{"rendered":"Mountain Collective Adds Whiteface, New York for 2025-26 Season"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n Whiteface becomes the third U.S. Northeast resort to join the Collective, which has retained a western-heavy portfolio in recent years but has made serious strides towards rectifying that.<\/p>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n <\/p>\n New York\u2019s Whiteface<\/a> will join the Mountain Collective Pass<\/a> for the upcoming 2025-26 season, according to New York State\u2019s ORDA. At 288 acres with a 3,430-foot top-to-bottom footprint, Whiteface is home to the longest vertical drop in the Northeast. Collective Pass holders will get two days of unrestricted access at Whiteface next winter, as well as all other mountains on the pass. <\/p>\n Whiteface becomes the fifth Northeast ski resort on the Collective for 2025-26, joining Maine\u2019s Sugarloaf and Sunday River and Quebec\u2019s Bromont and Le Massif de Charlevoix. For the upcoming winter, Mountain Collective will now offer two-day access to 27 destinations around the globe, 20 of which are in North America (Arapahoe Basin has left the pass for 2025-26). <\/p>\n Notably, Whiteface becomes the first-ever Mountain Collective partner in New York. This also marks the first time Whiteface has joined a multi-mountain pass (besides ORDA\u2019s Ski3 pass) since the dissolution of the MAX pass in 2018.<\/p>\n The Mountain Collective Pass has struggled to establish a strong presence in the Northeast, especially after losing Sugarbush<\/a> a few years ago. Until recently, the pass included only two Northeast mountains\u2014Le Massif<\/a> and Sugarloaf<\/a>\u2014leaving it with no representation in Vermont and offering limited appeal for skiers and riders based in New York or the surrounding areas. While last year\u2019s additions of Sunday River<\/a> and Bromont helped a little bit, the pass\u2019s primary competitors\u2014Epic, Ikon, and Indy\u2014each maintain a far more robust presence in the region.<\/p>\nOur Take<\/h3>\n