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A hiker on a grassy hillside with purple wildflowers looks down on the Colorado town of Crested Butte and the mountain in the background.
Summer is a glorious time to be in Crested Butte, Colorado. Like many mountain towns, affordable housing is hard to come by but the experience of working in such a place is worth the effort. (Photo: Mengzhonghua Photography/Getty)

Summer Work in a Mountain Town: Dreamy. The Rent: Not So Much.

A seasonal job in a mountain town is one of the most fun adventures there is. Our Colorado-based columnist offers proven tips on how to land lodging that you can afford.

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A hiker on a grassy hillside with purple wildflowers looks down on the Colorado town of Crested Butte and the mountain in the background.
(Photo: Mengzhonghua Photography/Getty)

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I want to live and work in a mountain town this summer, but finding affordable housing is proving to be near impossible. Can you give me any tips or direction so I can turn this dream into reality? A Frustrated Flatlander

I came for the winter and stayed for the summer is a common mountain-town refrain. That sentiment, combined with a pandemic-fueled real estate boom, has resulted in a dearth of affordable housing, both seasonal and permanent, in mountain towns across America.

In many small western communities like Steamboat Springs, Durango, and Snowmass, Colorado; Sun Valley, Idaho; and Mammoth Lakes, California, it used to be that employees and locals lived in houses, and tourists stayed in hotels. The reverse is now true: houses are monopolized by Airbnb and VRBO rentals and second homeowners, and some hotels are being purchased by ski resorts and converted to affordable employee housing.

Sadly, more and more essential jobs are going unfilled, some with six-figure salaries, because potential employees cant find reasonably-priced rentals. As a result, many mountain towns are shifting their focus to year-round, affordable-housing programs. In Wyoming, for example, Habitat for Humanity of the Greater Teton Area helps to fill critical nursing and teaching positions by building homes for individuals and families making between 30 to 80 percent of the areas median income.

What does this mean for seasonal workers? Heres my advice for finding affordable summer housing in a mountain town.

Find Towns Working on Their Housing Shortages

A family mountain-bikes downhill above the town of Whitefish, Montana, with a spectacular view of Flathead Lake.
Whitefish, Montana, a beautiful recreation hub, is making a concerted effort to woo more seasonal workers with affordable-housing programs. (Photo: Craig Moore/Getty)

Whitefish, Montana, the gateway to Glacier National Park, is one such place. Its , which supports full-time and seasonal employees, is funded in part by a added to local lodging, food, and transportation. Half of the contributions from its participants go to Housing Whitefish, a nonprofit that facilitates affordable housing.

Part of last years $52,000 allocation went toward a newly launched rental-assistance program, modeled after a similar one in . Over 12 months, Housing Whitefish will distribute a total of $64,620or $5,385 a monthto 17 qualified applicants. (The money goes directly to the property owner or management company.)

The , which advocates for better options in the North Tahoe and Truckee, California communities, aims to add inventory for the local workforce through its recently launched Accessory Dwelling Unit pilot program. Homeowners are incentivized to add rental space that includes a bedroom, bathroom, and kitchen, and in return they receive assistance with building, permitting, and leasing processes.

Although the organization cant help you find housing, it does direct prospective renters to resources through the .

Summer flowers in bloom frame a view of the mountain town of Truckee, California, with the Sierra in the background.
Living and working in a mountain town like Truckee, California (above) is a dream of many young people. According to Zillow, the median rent for a one-bedroom home in May was $2,150. At the time, 11 such properties were available. (Photo: Matt Gush/Getty)

In 2022, Breckenridge, Colorado, allocated $50 million to a five-year workforce housing plan to create some 1,000 new units. The towns housing fund also receives money from a short-term rental fee requiring owners to pay a set amount for each bedroom they rent. The goal is for nearly half of the towns workforce to live in Breckenridge, with a little over a third of the housing inventory reserved for locals.

In 2016, Aspen Skiing Co., the towns largest employer, purchased six 280-square-foot tiny homes for about $100,000 each and put them in the Aspen-Basalt Campground for both summer and winter seasonal employees. The project was such a success that it now offers 69 tiny homes for hires, and for the first time this year has introduced units designed to accommodate year-round employees.Units range from $550 to $750 a month, and summer leases are available from May 15 through October 31. The units currently have a waitlist for Aspen Skiing Company employees.

The interior of a tiny home in Aspen available to seasonal workers features a kitchen, living room with a L-shaped sofia and, accessed via stairs, a second-level bedroom with windows, a fan, and a mattress.
Aspen Skiing Co.s tiny homes, available to seasonal workers, are comfortable, spacious, and affordable, unlike other housing in town. In May, Zillow showed that the average rent for a one-bedroom property was $5,900. (Photo: Courtesy Hal Williams/Aspen Skiing Co.)

Employers in Sun Valley, including the Limelight Ketchum hotel, have also purchased tiny homes in the Meadows RV Park, 3.5 miles away, to rent to employees. Many of these programs run on an application system and most take enrollment for summer employees in March.

Land a Job Before You Head Out

A girl serves a flight of beers at a brewery in Aspen, Colorado. Landing a job before you move to a mountain town is generally a smart course of action.
A recent search for summer work in Aspen, Colorado, showed everything from bartenders and restaurant servers to camp counselors and bike valets. Landing a job before you move to a mountain town is a smart course of action, because you can prove to landlords that youll be able to pay. (Photo: RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

Many large employers, notably ski resorts such as Aspen Snowmass, , and , Colorado, or , Vermont, offer housing or make an effort to help you find housing after youve been hired. Sun Valley Resort, for example, has two dorm-style buildings with free laundry and fitness centers available for seasonal employees on a waitlist basis. Two-to-four-person accommodations range from $140 to $210 per person every two weeks. Theres also an option to pay day-to-day, starting at $10 a day.

Beyond ski resorts, places like offer town employees short-term seasonal rentals, for jobs at businesses like the recreation center or golf course, as well as rental-deposit-assistance programs.

Betsy Crum, housing director for the town of Snowmass Village, notes that winter housing is typically full, while theres sometimes more housing available for summer workers.

Montanas Big Sky Housing Trust has housing for up to 100 seasonal residents in four- and five-bedroom dorm-style configurations. These units are leased to local independent employers. Lone Mountain Land Company, another major employer in Big Sky, offers dorm-style housing for up to 400 seasonal residents employed by their entities.

Powder Light Development in Big Sky Montana
The Powder Light Development in Montana, part of the Big Sky Housing Trust’s efforts to support affordable housing (Photo: Becky Brockie)

Check Out These Helpful Housing Websites and Social Media Sites

Due to the huge demand for housing, many landlords avoid popular rental-listing sites Craigslist and Zillow. One resident seeking a new tenant for housing she has in Carbondale, Colorado, 30 miles from Aspen, didnt publicly post a listing because she knew shed be overwhelmed with calls. Instead, she put the word out quietly to friends and looked at posts from people in need of housing on a local Facebook group, .

In fact, local Facebook community groups or neighborhood-focused sites like often have rental listings you wont find on larger, public sites like Craigslist. is a free site where you can find a roommate or a room available to rent within a house.

When posting that youre seeking housing, be clear about your employment situation, desired rental dates, and budget. Younger people should present themselves as a mature, responsible option, preferably coming in with a job already secured. (For example: Hello, Im coming here to work for the Solar Institute and need a place to stay from mid-June through July thats less than $600 a month.)

You might find success on , a housing marketplace for vacation towns that pays property owners to convert their homes to short- and long-term rentals for the local workforce. Mountain destinations include Woodstock, Vermont; Truckee and South Lake Tahoe, California; Wood River Valley, Idaho; East Placer County, California; and Eagle County, Colorado.

Finally, is a membership-based platform (starting at $10.75 a month) where you can find house-sitting or pet-sitting gigs.

Consider 5 More Resources

1. Look at a Towns Website

Many communities offer housing programs or partner with local nonprofits or housing authorities, like the , to administer programs. Its always worth a call to any citys housing development and housing authority to see if they have resources, says Daniel Sidder, executive director of Housing Whitefish.

2. Embrace Camping or Vanlife

A handful of tents are pitched on a green, grassy mountainside filled with wildflowers in Crested Butte, Colorado.
Camping for the summer is an option in Crested Butte, and why not, with vistas like these? There are in the area, and many are first come, first servedalthough you’d have to change sites every 14 days, the maximum stay. Additionally, theres land for dispersed camping.

In Colorado, and have options for free car camping for a season. You can shower at local rec centers.

3.泭Cruise the Town

Some good old-fashioned neighborhood drive-bys to spot For Rent signs posted outside of apartments, on community boards at grocery stores, or in coffee shops can lead to deals, too.

 

A woman scans the newspaper classifieds while making a call on her cell phone.
Old-school resources like newspaper classifieds can still pay off, with postings for work and accommodations. (Photo: Kanawa_Studio/Getty)

4. Talk to Locals

Lindsay Nohl, 46, enjoyed free communal housing in Tucson, Arizona, while working as the director of NOLS Southwest. But when the campus closed during Covid, she moved to Teton Valley, Idaho. Recently, she made her eighth move in four years, as landlords continue to increase prices or start to rent their properties on Airbnb.

Her go-to strategy for finding cheap housing on the fly? Word of mouth. Another lesson: be flexible. Even though Nohl hasnt had a roommate in two decades, shes now paying $1,000 a month to share a two-bedroom, 800-square-foot house so she can remain in Teton Valley for the summer.

5.泭Scan Newspaper Classifieds

You might come across opportunities to pet-sit or nanny. Or working as a property manager can also lead to free or affordable housing.

Weigh Your Options

A group of people soak in a thermal pool in a field with beautiful views of Mammoth Mountain, California.
Soaking after work in the thermal waters outside the town of Mountain Lakes is a perk of living in this part of the Sierra. Californias minimum wage also pays more than many other states.(Photo: Courtesy Jake Stern)

The last thing you should consider, Flatlander, is which mountain towns are too pricey or too popular. For example, Steamboat, Aspen, and Telluride, Colorado, as well as Jackson, Wyoming, and Big Sky, Montana, have reputations as luxury vacation escapes, which means housing is in high demand and the cost of living will be greater there than in lesser-known but more economical mountain towns like Le Grande, Oregon, and Reno, Nevada. Or even Laramie, Wyoming, which has a lot going for it.

Many seasonal jobs pay minimum wage, which varies from state to state. In Utah and Wyoming, for example, the federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour, while Montana pays $10.30 an hour, Colorado $14.42 an hour, and California $16 an hour.

You should also consider free services offered by the mountain town youre considering. Aspen is expensive, but it offers free public transportation, which is another way to help save on costs.

Spending a summer working in a mountain town can be one of the best experiences of a young persons life. I hope my advice lands you good, affordable housing. Ill be pulling for you.

Author Jen Murphy stops while mountain biking in the woods of Breckenridge, Colorado, for a photo.
The author biking in Breckenridge, Colorado (Photo: Courtesy Jen Murphy)

Travel-advice columnist Jen Murphy has scored affordable rent by offering free travel tips to her landlord, as well as volunteering to take out the buildings trash cans on garbage day and maintain the gardens.

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