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Colorado weather: More than 20 inches of snow expected in mountains

The Park Range of Colorado’s Rocky Mountains will see between 6 and 15 inches on average

Julie Bogel heads to work during a snowstorm in downtown in Denver, Colorado on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Julie Bogel heads to work during a snowstorm in downtown in Denver, Colorado on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Lauren Penington of Denver Post portrait in Denver on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2024. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
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More than a foot of snow is expected on Colorado’s highest mountain peaks by Saturday morning, according to the National Weather Service.

The Park Range of Colorado’s Rocky Mountains will see between 6 and 15 inches on average, with roughly 20 inches possible in some areas, . As of Wednesday morning, through 5 a.m. Saturday included up to:

  • A trace of snow in the Denver and Boulder areas
  • 3 inches at Eldora
  • 5 inches in Winter Park
  • 6 inches on Colorado 125’s Willow Creek Pass near Granby and Colorado 9’s Hoosier Pass near Breckenridge
  • 8 inches on U.S. 6’s Loveland Pass, U.S. 40’s Muddy Pass near Kremmling and U.S. 40’s Berthoud Pass near Winter Park
  • 9 inches at Bear Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park and on Interstate 70’s Vail Pass
  • 10 inches on U.S. 34’s Milner Pass in RMNP
  • 11 inches on Colorado 14’s Cameron Pass near Fort Collins
  • 23 inches on Mount Zirkel, the highest summit of the Park Range

Will your favorite ski resort get snow this weekend? Here’s every major snow stake webcam in Colorado.

A will be in effect for the Park Range until 11 a.m. Thursday, warning of "difficult to impossible" travel, according to the weather service. The area will also be under an from Wednesday night to Thursday evening.

"Heavy snow and wind, drifting snow, will create dangerous avalanche conditions," . "Large and dangerous avalanches will be easy to trigger once the new snow accumulates. Avalanches will run naturally."

A separate was issued for the Front Range mountains at 6 a.m. Wednesday, which will continue through noon Thursday.

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