The honest review

The Killington Grand Resort Hotel sits at 228 East Mountain Road directly on Killington's ski mountain, which is its single biggest calling card for families. The pedestrian ski bridge connecting the hotel to the slopes means winter mornings look like this: kids get suited up in the lobby, walk across the bridge, and they're carving turns — no car, no shuttle wait, no parking hassle. That convenience factor is hard to overstate when you're wrangling young skiers in layers of gear.

Rooms range from queen studios with kitchenettes to full three-bedroom suites and penthouses that sleep up to ten. The kitchenettes and full kitchens in the larger units are a genuine win for families: you can stock a grocery run and skip the restaurant for at least one meal a day, which keeps costs from spiraling during multi-day ski trips. The largest penthouses include gas fireplaces in the living room and even in-room saunas, which feel almost comically luxurious after a day of skiing Vermont's steeper terrain.

The year-round heated outdoor pool is 75 feet long and flanked by two hot tubs overlooking the mountain — a legitimately nice setup that gets heavy use even in winter when steam rises off the water against a snowy backdrop. Kids tend to land here after ski school while parents decompress in the hot tub. The game room has complimentary Xbox consoles, which provides a reliable fallback on a bluebird day when someone inevitably twists an ankle or just needs a rest day.

Food-wise, Preston's Restaurant handles dinner in a mountain-lodge atmosphere, and the Grand Cafe runs a Starbucks setup for grab-and-go mornings. Neither is particularly budget-friendly — this is a resort, and pricing reflects it — but the convenience of not having to drive anywhere for coffee or a post-ski meal adds up over a long weekend.

The full-service spa is squarely aimed at adults, offering massage services and standard treatments that make this a reasonable pick even for couples who want some recovery time while grandparents or resort staff keep an eye on kids. The fitness center is solid but compact.

Summer at the Grand leans on Killington's Adventure Center (a separate operation with mountain coasters, ropes courses, and disc golf), the resort's 18-hole golf course immediately adjacent, and hiking trails directly off the mountain. Families who show up expecting a summer pool resort may find the on-mountain activities require driving short distances to different venues — this isn't an all-inclusive campus in the traditional sense.

The honest critique: pricing peaks aggressively during holiday ski weeks and school-break periods, and at those rates the value proposition depends entirely on how much your family will use the slope access. If you're skiing full days and leveraging the ski bridge repeatedly, it earns its cost. If you're a mixed-ability group where half the party is off-mountain by noon, there are more cost-effective bases in the area. Overall, for dedicated ski families who want zero friction between room and slopes, the Killington Grand is the clearest answer in this market.

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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 (10)
  • Fitness center
  • Full-service spa with massage services
  • Game room with complimentary Xbox
  • Grand Cafe (Starbucks)
  • Pedestrian ski bridge to slopes (winter)
  • Preston's Restaurant on-site
  • Shuttle to base lodges (peak ski days)
  • Ski storage
  • Two outdoor hot tubs with mountain views
  • Year-round 75-foot heated outdoor pool