The Inn at Lost Creek


Owned by Telluride Ski Resort and positioned in Mountain Village at 119 Lost Creek Lane, The Inn at Lost Creek offers ski-in/ski-out access with a newly launched ski valet, rooftop hot tubs, and rooms built around timber, stone, and handcrafted furnishings. The property holds a Google rating of 4.8 from over 200 reviews and covers the full range from romantic couples' stays to multi-room family arrangements, with a complimentary breakfast buffet included in every room rate.

Mountain Village's Quiet Case for Staying at the Hill
Mountain Village, the purpose-built resort town sitting above Telluride proper via the free gondola, divides lodging into two broad camps: large hotel-style properties positioned for amenities and social volume, and smaller, owner-managed properties where access to the mountain is the primary proposition. Our full Telluride hotels guide maps the full spread, but The Inn at Lost Creek — owned by Telluride Ski Resort itself — occupies a specific position inside that second camp. Its ski-in/ski-out geometry is not a marketing claim softened by a five-minute walk; it is a structural fact of the address at 119 Lost Creek Lane, and the resort ownership means that mountain-side services like the newly opened ski valet operate as a genuine extension of the skiing operation rather than a hotel add-on.
The Inn carries a Google rating of 4.8 from 203 reviews, a signal of consistent guest satisfaction at a property where the repeat visitor rate tends to be high. Telluride's ski resort draws a seasonally loyal crowd, and that loyalty rewards properties that remove friction rather than add spectacle. At Lost Creek, the valet storing skis and snowboards overnight , eliminating the schlep through a lobby with wet equipment , is the kind of logistical detail that converts first-time guests into returning ones.
What the Rooms Actually Deliver
The accommodation mix at The Inn at Lost Creek runs from studios to one-bedroom suites and one- and two-bedroom condos, covering the range from a couple on a long weekend to a family or small group needing separated sleeping arrangements. The design language across all units draws on mountain materials , timber, natural stone, handcrafted furnishings , in an earth-tone palette calibrated for the Southwestern Colorado setting. Black-and-white photography with regional character adds specificity without tipping into themed decoration.
Practically, every room includes a balcony, washer and dryer, and either a full kitchen or kitchenette. Most add fireplaces, steam showers, and jetted tubs. For a ski property, the kitchen provision matters: guests arriving for a week can manage their own meals at the start and end of long days on the mountain, reducing the dependency on restaurant booking availability during peak season. Telluride's restaurant scene is strong but not inexhaustible, and the option to cook in is a practical advantage that larger hotel-format properties in the area cannot always match.
The Food and Beverage Equation at a Resort-Owned Property
The editorial angle on dining at The Inn at Lost Creek starts with what the property provides and where it points guests outward. The complimentary breakfast buffet, included in every room rate, handles the morning efficiently , particularly relevant on ski days when timing between the first lift and the last bite matters. The inn's concierge service, noted by the inspector as strong enough that guests need not lift anything heavier than a cocktail or a mug of hot chocolate, functions as a gateway to the wider dining picture in Mountain Village and Telluride.
For guests whose priorities extend beyond the inn's own programme, the Telluride restaurant guide and bars guide cover the off-property options with specificity. The gondola connecting Mountain Village to Telluride town runs until late evening, which means dinner in town is a realistic option even on a cold night. In summer, the dining context shifts: Telluride's food and drink scene is lighter in visitor volume than the December-to-March peak, and experiences ranging from fly fishing to white water rafting restructure the day differently than a ski schedule would.
Summer, Dogs, and the Off-Season Case
Telluride's summer identity as an activity resort , mountain biking, fly fishing, white water rafting, kayaking, glider rides, four-by-four and ATV tours, horseback riding, rock climbing , is well established, and The Inn at Lost Creek builds a specific summer offer around golf. Golf valets hold clubs overnight and prep carts in the morning, mirroring the ski valet logic applied to a different season. For guests who do not golf, the concierge can connect to all of the above activities without requiring advance research on arrival.
The pet policy deserves specific mention because it goes well past the standard pet-friendly designation. Organic dog treats, plush beds, dedicated bowls, a specialty pet concierge, and access to the Soggy Dog Spa position the inn inside a small tier of mountain properties where bringing a dog does not require apologetic negotiation at check-in. For a section of the Telluride visitor base , the Denver and Dallas contingents who treat summer trips as multi-week retreats , this is a booking decision factor that drives choice between otherwise comparable properties.
Comparable properties in the broader US market that take the same approach to pet accommodation and multi-season programming include Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur and Sage Lodge in Pray, both of which use location-specific outdoor activity access as the primary guest value proposition alongside considered room design. Further afield, Amangiri in Canyon Point represents the desert-Southwest end of the activity-resort spectrum, while Canyon Ranch Tucson takes a wellness-first orientation to a similar geography.
Rooftop Hot Tubs and the Reservation Logic
The rooftop hot tubs at The Inn at Lost Creek require advance booking for private time slots, a detail that matters more than it might initially appear. At a ski property during peak season, post-mountain demand for heated water is high and predictable. Guests who arrive assuming open access will find the tubs occupied; guests who reserve a slot before arriving at the mountain in the morning will find a private soak waiting on return. The advance booking requirement is a logistical note, not a complaint , it is the mechanism that makes the experience private rather than shared. The same advance-booking discipline applies at comparable mountain properties; at Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz, peak-season amenity booking operates on a similar pre-arrival logic.
Telluride Context and Comparable Stays
Within Telluride's Mountain Village lodging set, the two properties most directly comparable in positioning to The Inn at Lost Creek are Lumière with Inspirato and the Madeline Hotel and Residences, Auberge Resorts Collection. The Madeline, as part of Auberge, brings a larger brand infrastructure and a more developed food and beverage programme; Lumière operates at a smaller, more private scale. The Inn at Lost Creek sits between them on the volume axis , intimate enough to deliver service depth, resort-owned enough to maintain operational standards through peak season.
For guests building a broader US mountain-resort itinerary, Alpine Falls Ranch in Superior offers a different model of Colorado mountain accommodation, while the Kona Village Rosewood and Little Palm Island represent the tropical end of the activity-resort spectrum. City alternatives for the same demographic , the urban-to-mountain traveller who prioritises service consistency , include The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York, Aman New York, and Raffles Boston.
For planning: the rooftop hot tub reservation should be made at or before check-in, and ski valet instructions are leading confirmed with the concierge on arrival day. The breakfast buffet is included in the room rate and requires no separate booking. Activity reservations for summer programming , particularly fly fishing and rafting , are worth making before arrival during July and August, when festival season in Telluride compresses activity availability across the board. The Telluride wineries guide provides further context on what the region's beverage scene looks like beyond the hotel.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the signature room at The Inn at Lost Creek?
- The one-bedroom suite represents the inn's clearest statement on its design approach: timber and natural stone construction, earth-tone palette, handcrafted furnishings, fireplace, steam shower, and jetted tub, combined with a balcony that faces the mountain setting. For larger parties, the two-bedroom condos add kitchen facilities and laundry in-unit, making them the practical choice for extended stays or families who want separation between sleeping and living areas.
- What should I know about The Inn at Lost Creek before I go?
- The property is owned by Telluride Ski Resort, which means ski-in/ski-out access is structural rather than approximate, and the ski valet service , new as of recent seasons , stores equipment overnight. The rooftop hot tubs require advance reservation; book a slot at or before check-in, not after returning from the mountain. A complimentary breakfast buffet is included in the room rate. Google reviews average 4.8 from 203 guests.
- Should I book The Inn at Lost Creek in advance?
- For peak ski season (December through March) and the Telluride festival period in summer (July-August), early booking is advised. The inn is an intimate property with a limited number of units, and Mountain Village accommodation at this quality tier fills quickly once the ski season calendar sets. For the shoulder seasons , spring and October , availability is generally easier, though the ski valet and some summer activities may have reduced hours.
- Who is The Inn at Lost Creek leading for?
- The property works across a wider demographic than most Mountain Village options: couples benefit from the rooftop hot tubs and the fireplace and jetted-tub configuration in most rooms; families or groups use the two-bedroom condos and in-unit kitchens to structure longer stays; and pet owners with dogs find a more developed pet service here than at comparable properties, including a specialty pet concierge and the Soggy Dog Spa.
- Does The Inn at Lost Creek have any facilities specifically for guests who are not skiers visiting in summer?
- The property provides golf valet service in summer , clubs stored overnight and carts prepped on request , alongside concierge connections to mountain biking, fly fishing, white water rafting, kayaking, glider rides, four-by-four and ATV tours, horseback riding, and rock climbing. The rooftop hot tubs remain available in summer with the same advance reservation system as winter. The complimentary breakfast buffet runs year-round.
Budget and Context
A compact peer snapshot based on similar venues we track.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Inn at Lost Creek | Ski in/ski out takes on new meaning at The Inn at Lost Creek, an intimate place… | This venue | |
| Aman New York | Michelin 3 Key | Michelin 3 Keys | |
| Amangiri | Michelin 3 Key | Michelin 3 Keys | |
| Hotel Bel-Air | Michelin 3 Key | Michelin 3 Keys | |
| The Beverly Hills Hotel | Michelin 3 Key | Michelin 3 Keys | |
| The Carlyle, A Rosewood Hotel | Michelin 2 Key | Michelin 2 Keys |
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