Q1 2026 Results

Canyon Haus Owners Earned More Than the Canyons Village Market in a Historically Tough Winter

A transparent look at how Canyon Haus performed against the broader Canyons Village rental market through the lowest-snow ski season on record.

What This Meant for You
+$1,641
What the average Canyon Haus owner earned above a comparable Canyons Village unit in Q1 2026

Q1 2026 RevPAR Premium
+37%
Canyon Haus owners earned 37% more per available night than the Canyons Village market

The Winter That Wasn’t

The 2025–26 ski season will be remembered as one of the most challenging winters in Park City’s modern history. Park City Mountain recorded just 158 inches of snow against its 355-inch average, and Utah logged its worst statewide snowpack since measurements began in 1930 — a snow water equivalent that came in at one-fifth of the previous record low.

The lodging market felt it immediately. Per the Park City Chamber & Visitors Bureau, March 2026 lodging occupancy fell to 52.3%, down 24.4% year-over-year. Both Park City Mountain and Deer Valley closed roughly three weeks earlier than planned.

Every property manager and rental owner in Park City felt some version of this story. The question worth asking isn’t whether your property earned less than last year — it almost certainly did. The question is how your property performed relative to the market.

Month by Month

January 2026
+21%
Canyon Haus owners averaged $83 RevPAR. The Canyons Village market averaged $69. We caught the New Year’s holiday peak with a $298 RevPAR opening day, then sustained the lead through MLK weekend and the Sundance build-up.

February 2026
+43%
Canyon Haus owners averaged $94 RevPAR. The Canyons Village market averaged $66. Presidents’ Day, ski week, the most competitive 28 days of the year. Our largest month-long lead of the quarter.

Early March 2026
+138%
Canyon Haus owners averaged $120 RevPAR. The Canyons Village market averaged $50. Even as the broader market faded with the warm-up and early resort closures, Canyon Haus continued to convert spring demand.

Canyon Haus Owners Out-Earned the Market

Canyon Haus-managed properties earned 37% more per available night than the broader Canyons Village rental market — and the gap widened as the season progressed.

Adjusted RevPAR, January 1 – March 31, 2026. Source: KeyData Dashboard benchmark. The amber line is what Canyon Haus owners earned per night. The blue line is what the average Canyons Village owner earned. The amber-shaded area shows the weeks Canyon Haus owners came out ahead.

Weekly RevPAR chart showing Canyon Haus owners outperforming the Canyons Village market in 7 of 12 reported weeks, with the largest gaps in late January and early February.

What Produced the Gap

Three operating decisions, executed every day through the season.

01
Daily Dynamic Pricing
Canyon Haus re-prices every unit daily, not weekly. Sundance, MLK, Presidents’ Day, and ski-week dates were priced into the market 60–90 days in advance — capturing demand before the broader market adjusted.

02
Direct Booking Strength
More of every dollar reaches the owner. Lower OTA dependency gives us pricing flexibility on close-in dates that other operators have to discount to fill. Our direct channel means fewer commissions between your guest and your account.

03
A Local Operations Team
All Seasons Resort Lodging runs Canyon Haus from inside Canyons Village. Pricing, guest service, and same-day rate moves are handled by people who ski this mountain — not a call center in another state.

See How Your Property Compares to the Market

Free, no-obligation income comparison for Canyons Village homeowners. Share a few details about your property and we’ll send back a one-page analysis showing what your unit likely earned this winter versus a comparable Canyon Haus–managed property. No pitch, no follow-up unless you ask for it.

Sources and methodology: Adjusted RevPAR comparisons: KeyData Dashboard benchmark, Q1 2026. The “Canyons Village market” comp set includes Canyons Village base-area condo product and Silverado Lodge. Weeks of March 9–22 are excluded from comparisons pending data reconciliation with our reporting partner; published figures reflect 76 of 90 quarter days. Snow and season context: Park Record, KPCW, SnowBrains (March–April 2026). Lodging market data: TownLift, KPCW, and the Park City Chamber & Visitors Bureau (April 2026).