The honest review

Four Seasons has spent decades perfecting the formula for rich parents who travel with kids, and Jackson Hole is no exception. The scores tell you why: room layout and location both hit 90, which means you're not squeezing a family into a shoebox or staying in some dead-zone suburb. At this price tier in a ski-mountain destination, that's table stakes, but it's worth noting because not every $$$$ property gets it right.

The real strength here is balance. Kid amenities score 88—strong, not inflated—and parent recovery sits at 89. That's rare. Most resorts either nail kids' programming and leave parents stranded in the lobby, or cater so hard to adults that children end up bored. The 90s in safety and rooms suggest this is a property that doesn't cheap out on supervision or space, which matters when you're bringing elementary and tween-age kids into a mountain setting.

The pricing score of 85 is honest: you're paying ultra-luxury rates, full stop. But in Jackson Hole at the Four Seasons level, you're not getting fleeced relative to the market. The tradeoff is straightforward—you're trading cost for service consistency, kid programming that doesn't feel like supervised daycare, and the quiet confidence that comes with a brand built for multi-generational travel. If you're already committed to the $$$$ bucket, this resort's family-specific strengths justify it better than a lot of alternatives.

Who this works for

Derived from FamilyFactor data

  • Toddlers

    ages 0–3

  • Elementary

    ages 4–8

  • Tweens

    ages 9–12

  • Teens

    ages 13+

  • Multi-gen

    with grandparents

All amenities (7)
  • Concierge service
  • Family-suite room category
  • Kids-welcome programming
  • On-property pools
  • Recreation facilities
  • Restaurants on site
  • Spa