Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Best Places to Stay in Colorado: 7 Areas & 21 Hotels (2026)

    June 2, 2026

    Colorado Winter Vacation Guide (2026): Snow Months & Best Things to Do

    June 1, 2026

    15 Best Small Towns in Colorado: From Ski Resorts to Ghost Towns (2026)

    May 30, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Your Travel Planning | Simple Guides for Hotels, Flights & DestinationsYour Travel Planning | Simple Guides for Hotels, Flights & Destinations
    • Hotels & Stays
    • Flights
    • Destinations
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SUBSCRIBE
    • Home
    • Hotels & Stays

      Best Places to Stay in Colorado: 7 Areas & 21 Hotels (2026)

      June 2, 2026

      13 Best Hotels in Old San Juan: Historic Stays in Puerto Rico’s UNESCO Quarter (2026)

      May 27, 2026

      Where to Stay in Puerto Rico: 7 Best Areas & 15 Top Hotels & Resorts (2026)

      May 25, 2026

      Does Puerto Rico Have All-Inclusive Resorts? The Truth & 15 Best Resort Packages (2026)

      May 22, 2026

      12 Best Hawaii All-Inclusive Resorts (2026): Top Worry-Free Vacation Deals

      April 17, 2026
    • Flights

      Flying from Brunei to Singapore: A Quick and Comfortable Flight to Asia’s Economic Powerhouse

      March 3, 2026

      Flying from Cebu to Singapore: What the Flight Feels Like Between Two Southeast Asian Hubs

      March 3, 2026

      Flying from Kuala Lumpur to Brunei: What the Quick Flight to Borneo’s Capital Is Like

      March 3, 2026

      Flying from Kuala Lumpur to Timor Leste: Exploring the Unique Flight to Southeast Asia’s Hidden Gem

      March 3, 2026

      Flying from Manila to Hong Kong: A Short and Convenient Flight to Asia’s Vibrant Hub

      March 3, 2026
    • Destinations
    • Travel Planning
    • Remote Travel
    Your Travel Planning | Simple Guides for Hotels, Flights & DestinationsYour Travel Planning | Simple Guides for Hotels, Flights & Destinations
    Home»Destinations»15 Best Small Towns in Colorado: From Ski Resorts to Ghost Towns (2026)
    Destinations

    15 Best Small Towns in Colorado: From Ski Resorts to Ghost Towns (2026)

    Lucas HanleyBy Lucas HanleyMay 30, 2026Updated:June 2, 2026No Comments19 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Mountain valley town at sunset, ranking among the best small towns in Colorado.
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    Colorado’s reputation rests on its big peaks and big parks, but a lot of what makes the state worth visiting lives in places with populations under five thousand. The small towns in Colorado are where the real character of the Rockies sits: Victorian main streets that survived the silver crash, ski villages tucked into box canyons, hot springs that have been drawing people since long before the highways arrived, and ghost towns left mostly alone by time. This guide pulls fifteen of them together, grouped by what they’re best at, with the practical detail you’ll need to decide which one fits your trip.

    The Small Town Matrix: At a Glance

    Looking for… Best fits
    Families & kids Steamboat Springs, Grand Lake
    Couples & romance Carbondale, Ouray
    Hidden gems with thin crowds Paonia, Florence
    A day trip from Denver Idaho Springs, Georgetown
    Hot springs Pagosa Springs, Buena Vista
    History & ghost towns Victor, Leadville, Silverton

    Smart Routes: Pairing Towns Into Trips

    Winding highway cut into a steep rocky cliffside in the San Juan Mountains.
    Image: “Mountain view along the “Million Dollar Highway” in Ouray County, between Silverton and Ouray, high in the San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado LCCN2015632304.tif by Carol M. Highsmith, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Most of these places work better in pairs than alone, since a single small town rarely fills more than a weekend. Four routes, each following an officially named scenic byway, cover most of what travelers come for.

    The first is the San Juan Skyway, which incorporates the famous Million Dollar Highway and shows best in summer when the high passes are open. Start in Telluride for a couple of nights, drive northeast to Ouray for a long soak in the hot springs, then continue south along the Million Dollar Highway stretch of US-550, over Red Mountain Pass, and into Silverton. The route is consistently ranked among the most spectacular drives in the country.

    The second is the I-70 Mountain Corridor, which works year-round and fits into a single day. Drive straight west from Denver on Interstate 70, stop in Idaho Springs for lunch, then push another 15 minutes up to Georgetown for the historic main street and, in December, the Christmas Market.

    The third is the Top of the Rockies Scenic Byway, which connects to the Collegiate Peaks region farther south. Spend a morning in Leadville, which sits on the byway itself, exploring the National Mining Museum and the historic downtown, then drive south on US-24 along the Arkansas River valley to Buena Vista to raft the river and end the day at Mt. Princeton Hot Springs.

    The fourth is the Gold Belt Tour Scenic Byway, an antiquing-and-mining loop most travelers miss. Browse Florence’s main street in the morning, then take Phantom Canyon Road, a former narrow-gauge railroad grade and part of the official Gold Belt Tour, up to the old gold-mining town of Victor for photographs around the abandoned mines as the light drops.

    The Ultimate Small Ski Towns in Colorado

    The first cluster is the towns built around skiing. What makes these different from the giant corporate resorts is that they’ve kept the bones of small towns underneath the chairlifts: walkable streets, independent restaurants, and almost no chain storefronts.

    1. Telluride

    Telluride nestled in a snowy valley surrounded by steep pine-covered mountains.

    Telluride sits at the floor of a box canyon so steep that the only road in is the same road out, and the geography keeps the town honest. There are no stoplights, no fast-food chains, and most people get around on bikes or on foot. It’s one of the more isolated of the small ski towns in Colorado, which is exactly why people love it.

    The drive from Denver runs about 6.5 hours, 360 miles, so most travelers fly into Montrose instead. February is the deep ski month, and late September brings both the fall color and the film festival. Skip Telluride if you’re traveling on a tight budget, since lodging consistently lands among the highest in the country.

    Aerial view of Telluride surrounded by green pines and golden autumn aspen trees.
    Historic main street in Telluride featuring a flower planter, brick buildings, and mountains in the background.
    Image: “Telluride_1090647.jpg” by Sizzlipedia, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    The single must-do that costs nothing is the free gondola linking the historic town to Mountain Village, with views across the San Juans from the saddle in the middle. For lodging in 2026, expect roughly $350–$650 a night at The Hotel Telluride and $250–$450 at the historic New Sheridan downtown.

    2. Crested Butte

    A snowy landscape with a winding river and a mountain peak in the background.
    Image: “Slate_River_(Colorado).JPG” by Jeffrey Beall, used under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Crested Butte has a stronger residue of its hippie past than most resort towns, and Elk Avenue, the main street, is lined with colorful Victorian buildings that still look more like a real working downtown than a planned village. The community feels close-knit in a way that bigger ski towns have lost.

    Cars parked along Elk Avenue in Crested Butte at twilight with a mountain backdrop.
    Image: “Scene along Elk Avenue, the main street of Crested Butte, a town heavily populated during ski season located high in the Rocky Mountains in Gunnison County, Colorado. In the distance is Mount Crested LCCN2015633528.tif” by Carol M. Highsmith, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    It’s about 4.5 hours from Denver, 230 miles. The signature visit is in July, when the surrounding meadows fill with wildflowers and the town hosts a festival around the bloom. Skip Crested Butte in winter if you’re a beginner skier, since the mountain is notoriously steep and rewards advanced terrain more than gentle learning curves. The summer move is renting a mountain bike and riding the legendary 401 Trail, which contours the high country with views you’ll remember.

    Lodging-wise, the Elevation Hotel & Spa runs roughly $200–$450, and Purple Mountain Bed & Breakfast around $150–$250.

    3. Steamboat Springs

    A skier making their way down a slope surrounded by snow-heavy evergreen trees.

    Steamboat is the largest of the small ski towns on this list, but it still feels like an old ranching town that happens to have a ski mountain attached. The cattle culture is genuine, not staged for visitors, and the main drag carries that character into the restaurants and shops.

    A green mountain landscape towering over a quiet town in the summer.

    3 hours from Denver, 156 miles. January and February deliver the famously dry Champagne Powder snow, while June through August are for tubing the Yampa River right through the middle of town. Skip Steamboat if you’re after total seclusion, since it draws steady family traffic year-round. The single experience that defines a visit is driving out to Strawberry Park Hot Springs and soaking in the rock pools while snow falls into the surrounding forest. The Steamboat Grand runs around $250–$550 in 2026, while the budget Rabbit Ears Motel sits at $120–$180.

    Sheer rock walls towering over the muddy waters of the Yampa river below.
    Yampa River

    Scenic Small Towns: Hot Springs and Mountain Views

    The next cluster trades skiing for setting. These are small towns where the surrounding landscape is the main attraction, and where the rhythm bends around hot springs, lakes, and the slow business of being outside.

    4. Ouray

    Looking down through pine trees into the small mountain valley town of Ouray.

    Ouray has fewer than a thousand residents and sits ringed by sheer cliffs that climb so abruptly the comparison to the Alps writes itself. Most people call it the Switzerland of America, and the nickname is genuinely earned the first time you stand on the main street and look up.

    About 5.5 hours from Denver, 300 miles. The Ouray Ice Festival in January draws climbers from around the world, while July and August are for off-roading the Jeep trails up to old mining sites. Skip Ouray if narrow mountain roads with no guardrails unsettle you, particularly the Million Dollar Highway over Red Mountain Pass.

    A peaceful hot spring surrounded by trees, rocks, and a playground in a valley.
    Image: “Ouray_Hot_Springs,_Ouray,_Colorado_LCCN2015632415.tif” by Carol M. Highsmith, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image
    Large outdoor swimming pool at Ouray Hot Springs surrounded by mountains.
    Image: “Ouray_Hot_Springs_Pool.jpg” by DiScience, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    The signature soak is at Box Canyon Hot Springs or Orvis, both sulphur-free, which means no rotten-egg smell that you find at many geothermal pools. The Beaumont Hotel & Spa runs roughly $250–$400, with Box Canyon Lodge a notch cheaper at $180–$250.

    5. Pagosa Springs

    Natural mineral hot springs flowing over a rocky mound under a clear blue sky.
    Image: “Pagosa_Hot_Springs_-_looking_west_from_Hot_Springs_Blvd.jpg” by Netherzone, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Pagosa Springs runs at a deliberately slow pace, and the giveaway is the sight of locals walking along the San Juan River in bathrobes between soaks. The hot springs aren’t an attraction here; they’re the town’s reason for existing.

    Stepping stones arranged in the shallow, flowing water of the San Juan River.
    Image: “Pagosa_Hot_Springs,_soaking_pools_on_the_San_Juan_River.jpg” by Netherzone, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    5 hours from Denver, 277 miles. The peak experience is winter, sitting in a 100-degree pool with snow falling onto your head. Skip Pagosa if you’re looking for nightlife or shopping; neither really exists. The day-pass at The Springs Resort gets you access to the deepest geothermal pools in the world by Guinness standards. Staying at The Springs Resort itself includes pool access and runs around $350–$600, while the budget High Country Lodge sits at $130–$180.

    6. Buena Vista

    A dense snowy forest with red cabins and tall mountain peaks in the background in Buena Vista.

    Buena Vista is a rafting town. Whitewater paddlers and craft brewers cross paths every evening after the boats come off the Arkansas River, and the whole town has the loose, slightly sunburnt energy of a place built around moving water.

    A blue raft full of people floating down the Arkansas River in Buena Vista.
    Image: “Arkansas_River_(Mt_Sheep_Canyon)_2016-07-12_527.jpg” by Chris Light, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    2.5 hours from Denver, 122 miles. Late May through July is the peak rafting window, when snowmelt sends Arkansas to its highest flows of the year. Skip Buena Vista from November through April if you don’t like a quiet town in its off-season. The classic day pairs a rafting trip with an evening soak at Mt. Princeton Hot Springs Resort, where a day pass runs around $28. The Surf Hotel & Chateau is the design-forward option at $220–$350, while Mt. Princeton itself runs $200–$320 if you want to roll out of bed into the water.

    A freight train traveling along the riverbank at the base of a rocky hill.
    Image: “Colorado_-Arkansas_River(45318264014).jpg” by Mobilus In Mobili, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    7. Carbondale

    Aerial view of the green valley town of Carbondale sitting below a snowy mountain.
    Image: “Carbondale_Aerial.jpg” by Pierre Hollard, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Carbondale is the artist’s answer to the ski-resort question. Down the valley from Aspen, it has built itself around contemporary galleries, organic farms, and a downtown that runs at a different tempo than the resort up the road.

    A vibrant grove of golden aspen trees standing tall during the autumn season.

    3 hours from Denver, 170 miles. The town shows best in fall, September through October, when the Rio Grande Trail is cool enough for long bike rides and the surrounding ranches are in harvest.

    Skip Carbondale if you want to walk straight out of your hotel onto a ski lift; choose Aspen for that. The unusual stay is at Marble Distilling Co., where the rooms sit above a working vodka distillery and breakfast comes with a tasting flight. Rates there run about $280–$450, with the Comfort Inn & Suites as the budget option at $150–$200.

    8. Grand Lake

    Grand Lake town and its calm water surrounded by green hills under a cloudy sky.
    Image: “Grand_Lake,_town_and_lake,_view_to_south.jpg” by Pimlico27, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Grand Lake serves as the western gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park, and the wooden boardwalks running along its main street give the place a Western feel that’s deliberately preserved rather than themed.

    About 2.5 hours from Denver, 100 miles. June through September is the window for boating and hiking, and the lake itself, the deepest natural lake in Colorado, is the centerpiece. Skip Grand Lake in winter unless your car is set up for snow, since the surrounding passes ice over and close. The afternoon to plan for is renting a kayak and being out on the water at sunset. The historic Grand Lake Lodge runs $200–$350, with Western Riviera Lakeside Lodging at $140–$220.

    Historic Towns and Real Ghost Towns in Colorado

    The third cluster is for travelers drawn to what mining built and what it left behind. These are towns where the history isn’t recorded; it’s the same buildings, sometimes the same families.

    9. Victor

    The quiet, slightly weathered historic main street in the old mining town of Victor.
    Image: “Victor,CO,_USA-_panoramio.jpg” by Jacob Montgomery, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Victor is the closest thing to a genuine ghost town that still has people living in it. The red-brick buildings from the 1890s stand quietly on streets that haven’t been polished up for tourism, which is exactly the appeal. Nothing is staged here.

    Wide view of a lush pine forest stretching toward distant mountain ranges.

    2 hours from Denver, but only 1 hour from Colorado Springs, which is the more practical base. May through October keeps the weather warm enough for walking the old mining trails. Skip Victor if you’re traveling with younger children who spook easily, since the abandoned cemeteries and decaying mine structures lean into the eerie. The signature stop is the giant wooden sculpture known as Rita the Rock Planter, paired with a walk on the Vindicator Valley Trail through old mining ruins.

    The Black Monarch Hotel, a horror-themed boutique stay, runs $150–$200; otherwise this is best as a day trip from Colorado Springs.

    10. Silverton

    A large red welcome sign stretched across the road entering Silverton.
    Image: “Welcome_to_Silverton_Colorado_(52823741099).jpg” by Tony Webster, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Silverton sits alone in an old volcanic basin at the end of a single gravel main street lined with original saloons. It’s one of the most isolated of the historic small towns in Colorado, and that isolation is part of what kept it intact.

    The historic San Juan County Courthouse building in Silverton under a blue sky.

    6 hours from Denver, 330 miles. May through October is when the Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad runs full schedule, and most visitors arrive on the train rather than by road. Skip Silverton in winter unless you’re heli-skiing, since services thin out almost completely. The train ride itself, at $100–$200 a ticket, is the experience. The Grand Imperial Hotel runs roughly $160–$250, and the boutique Wyman Hotel about $180–$300.

    A black diesel locomotive operating at the railyard in Silverton.
    Image: “Durango_and_Silverton_NGRR_May_2024-t2.jpg” by Didier Duforest, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    11. Leadville

    A solitary white house sitting in a golden meadow at the foot of distant mountains.

    Leadville holds a single record that shapes everything about a visit: at 10,152 feet, it’s the highest incorporated city in North America. The thin air keeps casual visitors away and gives the town a stoic, mining-camp pride that other historic towns have softened over time.

    2 hours from Denver, 100 miles. June through September is the practical hiking window, when the surrounding fourteeners are reachable. Skip Leadville if you have heart or respiratory issues, since the elevation is genuinely demanding and most travelers feel it. The cult experience is buying a Made-in-Leadville fleece at Melanzana, which typically requires a scheduled appointment to enter the small shop. The historic Delaware Hotel runs $130–$200, with the novel Tiny House Leadville option at $120–$160.

    12. Florence

    Main street in Florence lined with historic brick buildings and parked cars.
    Image: “Downtown_Florence_Historic_District.JPG” by Jeffrey Beall, used under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Florence sits out on the plains rather than in the mountains, and where the others trade in altitude or scenery, Florence trades in antiques. The pace is slow, the architecture is older than you’d expect, and the main street holds enough secondhand shops to fill a long afternoon.

    2 hours from Denver, 115 miles, or 45 minutes from Colorado Springs. Florence works year-round since the weather is mild. Skip it if you need mountain scenery and outdoor activity to make a trip feel complete; this isn’t that kind of stop. The afternoon to plan is hunting along the antique stretch of Main Street, which served as a filming location for the Netflix film Our Souls at Night. The Florence Rose Bed & Breakfast runs around $120–$160.

    The Best Small Towns Near Denver

    The last cluster is the one most travelers actually use: small towns close enough to Denver to manage as a day trip or a weekend, without committing to the longer drive west.

    13. Idaho Springs

    Old mining structures and a yellow conveyor belt at Phoenix Gold Mine.
    Image: “Phoenix_Gold_Mine,Idaho_Springs,_Colorado(3).jpg” by Shari Garland, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Idaho Springs is the first mountain town you reach driving west from Denver, and it carries an unusual mix of gold-rush heritage and busy roadside-stop energy from the constant I-70 traffic. It’s not quaint, but it’s authentic.

    Cars driving down the historic commercial main street in Idaho Springs.
    Image: “1500_Block_2016-07-12_1113.jpg” by Chris Light, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Under 45 minutes from Denver, 32 miles. It works year-round and is the natural escape valve when I-70 traffic stalls further west. Skip Idaho Springs if you’re sensitive to highway noise; the interstate runs close to town. The afternoon to plan is a slice from Beau Jo’s pizza followed by a soak at Indian Hot Springs. Miner’s Pick Bed and Breakfast runs $140–$200, and a day trip from Denver works just as well.

    14. Georgetown

    Colorful historic Victorian storefronts lining a street in Georgetown.
    Image: “Georgetown,_Colorado5.jpg” by dconvertini, used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Georgetown holds the best-preserved Silver Rush architecture in the state, and the whole downtown is designated as a National Historic Landmark. It’s small enough that walking is the only sensible way to see it.

    Steam locomotive pulling passenger cars over a bridge in Georgetown.
    Image: “Georgetown_Loop_Railroad_-Steam_Locomotive_No._9-_September_2016.jpg” by Jerry Huddleston, used under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Under 1 hour from Denver, 45 miles. December turns the town into a European-style Christmas Market that fills the historic streets with stalls and lights. Skip Georgetown if you’re a night owl, since the restaurants and shops close early. The classic ride is the Georgetown Loop Railroad, a narrow-gauge steam train across a high trestle, at $30–$45 a ticket. Hotel Chateau Chamonix runs around $180–$280 a night.

    15. Paonia

    Aerial view of colorful agricultural fields and orchards during fall harvest.
    Image: “Fall_harvest_in_Paonia,_Colorado.jpg” by Webphd, used under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    Paonia is the most off-the-beaten-path of any of the small towns near Denver, well off the main highways and built around a working farm-to-table culture. It’s where you go when you want the rural, slow version of Colorado rather than the tourist version.

    Black sheep grazing on green grass beneath leafy apple trees in an orchard.
    Image: “Black_Welsh_Mountain_sheep_(15139797415).jpg” by cogdogblog, used under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license, via Wikipedia Commons. Link to image

    4 hours from Denver, 230 miles. September brings the Mountain Harvest Festival, which is the most active week of the year. Skip Paonia if wine tasting and orchard visits don’t interest you, since that’s the heart of what the town offers. The afternoon to build a visit around is U-pick fruit at the orchards along Highway 133, with stops at the small wineries between them. Bross Hotel Bed & Breakfast runs around $150–$220.

    Practical Planning for Mountain Towns

    Three things deserve a moment of advance thinking before any small-town trip into the Colorado Rockies.

    Altitude

    Several of these towns sit at elevations where your body will notice the change. Leadville, at 10,152 feet, is the extreme case, but Telluride, Silverton, and Crested Butte all sit comfortably above 8,000 feet. The standard precautions are genuine: drink more water than feels natural, hold off on alcohol the first day, and don’t plan a strenuous hike on your first morning. If you can sleep at a lower elevation early in the trip before climbing, your body adjusts more smoothly.

    Winter Driving on I-70

    Colorado’s Traction Law applies on I-70 during winter storms, which means your vehicle needs either snow tires, four-wheel drive with all-season tires, or chains. Rental cars don’t always come equipped for this, so it’s worth asking at the counter. Even in clear weather, the weekend bottlenecks westbound on Saturday and eastbound on Sunday turn a two-hour drive into four or five. Midweek travel or very early starts make a real difference.

    What Things Cost

    Hot spring admission runs from about $28 at Mt. Princeton up to roughly $70 at the more upscale Sunwater Spa in Buena Vista. Gondola rides split sharply by town: Telluride’s is free, while Aspen and Breckenridge charge $30–$55. The two scenic train rides have very different price points, with the Durango and Silverton at $100–$200 a ticket and the shorter Georgetown Loop at $30–$45.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Which Colorado small town is closest to Denver?

    Idaho Springs is the closest mountain town to Denver, under 45 minutes and roughly 32 miles west on I-70. It’s the easiest day trip in this guide and the most realistic afternoon escape if you’re working with a half day rather than a full weekend.

    What is the highest incorporated town in Colorado?

    Leadville holds the record at 10,152 feet, which also makes it the highest incorporated city in North America. The elevation defines the town’s character, the difficulty of physical activity there, and the kind of traveler it suits.

    Which Colorado mountain town has the best hot springs?

    Pagosa Springs has the deepest natural geothermal pools in the world by Guinness measurement, which puts it at the top of the list. Ouray and Buena Vista are the strong runners-up, each with multiple soaking options at different price points and atmospheres.

    Are there any real ghost towns in Colorado?

    Yes. Victor is one of the most genuine surviving examples, with original 1890s mining-era buildings and abandoned mine structures still standing on the surrounding hills. It hasn’t been polished up for tourists, which is exactly what makes it work.

    Which small town is the best for a family ski trip?

    Steamboat Springs consistently ranks at the top for family skiing, thanks to gentler beginner terrain, the dry Champagne Powder snow that makes falls less punishing, and a wide range of off-mountain activities including the hot springs that keep non-skiing family members happy.

    When is the best time to visit Colorado’s small towns?

    February is the peak window for skiing across the resort towns. July is the strongest summer month for hiking and wildflowers, especially in Crested Butte. September into early October brings fall color through the San Juans, and December turns Georgetown and a handful of other historic towns into walkable Christmas destinations.

    Choosing the Right Town for Your Trip

    Snowy street scene highlighting winter in one of the small towns in Colorado.

    The honest answer to which of these towns is best is that it depends almost entirely on who you’re traveling with and what you’re chasing.

    Couples looking for slow evenings and good food gravitate toward Carbondale or Ouray. Families balancing different ages tend to do well in Steamboat or Grand Lake, where the activity menu is wide enough to keep everyone happy. Travelers drawn to history and quieter places find more to chew on in Victor, Leadville, and Silverton than in any of the polished resorts. And for anyone working with limited time out of Denver, Idaho Springs and Georgetown deliver a real small-town experience inside a single afternoon.

    For deeper planning, the companion guide on the best time to visit Colorado breaks the year down month by month, and the broader overview of the best places to visit in Colorado sets these towns into the wider context of the state.

    Related Articles

    1. Colorado Winter Vacation Guide (2026): Snow Months & Best Things to Do
    2. Best Places to Stay in Colorado: 7 Areas & 21 Hotels (2026)
    Lucas Hanley

    Related Posts

    25 Best Places to Visit in Colorado: From the Rocky Mountains to Mesa Verde

    May 28, 2026

    The 15 Best Caribbean Islands to Visit in 2026: Safest Spots for US Travelers

    May 20, 2026

    10 Best Caribbean Islands for Families (Where Parents Actually Relax in 2026)

    May 19, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss
    Hotels & Stays

    Best Places to Stay in Colorado: 7 Areas & 21 Hotels (2026)

    By Evan WhitmoreJune 2, 20260

    Picking the best places to stay in Colorado is harder than picking a hotel anywhere…

    Colorado Winter Vacation Guide (2026): Snow Months & Best Things to Do

    June 1, 2026

    15 Best Small Towns in Colorado: From Ski Resorts to Ghost Towns (2026)

    May 30, 2026

    Best Time to Visit Colorado: A Month-by-Month Guide for Skiing, Hiking & Leaf-Peeping

    May 29, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Our Picks

    Best Places to Stay in Colorado: 7 Areas & 21 Hotels (2026)

    June 2, 2026

    Colorado Winter Vacation Guide (2026): Snow Months & Best Things to Do

    June 1, 2026

    15 Best Small Towns in Colorado: From Ski Resorts to Ghost Towns (2026)

    May 30, 2026

    Best Time to Visit Colorado: A Month-by-Month Guide for Skiing, Hiking & Leaf-Peeping

    May 29, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Demo
    About Us
    About Us

    About Your Travel Planning

    YourTravelPlanning.com provides clear, practical travel planning guides to help you choose hotels, flights, destinations, and long stays with confidence. We focus on simple, research-based advice designed to make trip planning easier and less stressful for everyday travelers.

    Some guides may include affiliate links that support our work at no extra cost to you

    Our Picks

    Best Places to Stay in Colorado: 7 Areas & 21 Hotels (2026)

    June 2, 2026

    Colorado Winter Vacation Guide (2026): Snow Months & Best Things to Do

    June 1, 2026

    15 Best Small Towns in Colorado: From Ski Resorts to Ghost Towns (2026)

    May 30, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    © 2026 YourTravelPlanning · All Rights Reserved

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.