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Park City, United States

Squatters Roadhouse Grill Park City

Price≈$20
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacityLarge

Park City's après-ski dining scene splits between white-tablecloth ambition and honest, high-energy rooms built for skiers still wearing their boots. Squatters Roadhouse Grill at 1900 Park Ave sits in the latter category, offering the kind of American grill format that the mountain town has long relied on for post-slope recovery. It occupies a practical address on the edge of the resort corridor, positioned between the slopes and the historic Main Street strip.

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Address
1900 Park Ave, Park City, UT 84060
Phone
+1 435 649 9868
Squatters Roadhouse Grill Park City restaurant in Park City, United States
About

The Room Before the Meal

Park City's dining character is shaped as much by altitude and season as by any chef's ambition. After a day on Deer Valley or Park City Mountain, what most diners want is warmth, volume, and familiarity, a format that the American roadhouse grill tradition delivers without apology. Squatters Roadhouse Grill at 1900 Park Ave occupies exactly that position in the local dining map: a full-service grill room pitched at skiers, families, and the après crowd that fills Park City from late November through April, when the mountain town operates at its highest density.

The address places it on Park Avenue, the artery that connects the resort base areas to the Main Street corridor. That is the defining logic of the room. Roadhouse-format restaurants in ski towns function as decompression chambers, and the finest of them earn their place through consistency, portion honesty, and a drinks program that moves quickly enough to match the pace of a hungry après crowd.

Where It Sits in Park City's Dining Spectrum

Park City's restaurant scene covers a wide range. At the upper end, places like Yuta (American Steakhouse) and Apex operate closer to the resort-destination fine dining tier, with wine programs and tasting menus that would hold their own in a major city. Further along Main Street, 350 Main Brasserie and 501 On Main represent the mid-tier brasserie model, while Alberto's Mexican Restaurant anchors the casual end with regional specificity. Squatters Roadhouse Grill operates in the same casual bracket, carrying the Squatters brand, a Utah brewing institution, into a grill format that pairs the brewery's output with American comfort cooking.

The brewery lineage matters for context. Squatters as a brand has operated in Utah since the early 1990s, predating the state's more relaxed liquor laws and surviving the regulatory environment that shaped how Utah restaurants think about alcohol service. The Park City outpost carries that heritage into a mountain-town setting where the craft beer component genuinely anchors the experience, rather than serving as an afterthought to a food-first program. For a diner whose priority is a well-made local draft alongside a properly sized plate of grill food, that distinction is meaningful.

For comparison, the tier above Squatters in Park City's casual-American category is represented by places like High West Distillery and Saloon, where the spirits program adds a distinct layer of local identity, or Tree Room at Sundance, where the rustic-American format carries more culinary ambition. Squatters sits comfortably below that tier in terms of formality and price positioning, which is precisely what makes it functional for a broader cross-section of the Park City visitor base. If your reference point for American casual dining runs to destinations like Emeril's in New Orleans or Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, the register here is deliberately different, this is the unfussy end of the American dining spectrum, and it does not pretend otherwise.

The Sensory Logic of a Mountain Grill Room

The roadhouse grill format carries a specific sensory signature that operates independently of any individual kitchen: the smell of wood smoke or char from an active grill, the ambient noise of a room that prioritizes conversation over quiet, surfaces that absorb the energy of a group rather than demanding restraint from it. In ski towns, these rooms tend to run loud during peak service, with the bar area generating most of the energy. The visual language is typically practical, booths and tables built for durability, interiors that reference either mountain materials or Western Americana, lighting warm enough to signal comfort without approaching candlelight territory.

Squatters Roadhouse Grill reads within that sensory tradition. The Park Avenue location is built to handle volume during peak ski season, which runs from late November through March, with Sundance Film Festival in late January adding a compressed surge of visitors to an already busy window. Outside those peak months, Park City's restaurant scene quiets considerably, many casual operators see meaningful drops in traffic from May through October, though summer hiking and festival programming has gradually extended the active season. For visitors planning around shoulder season, the roadhouse format tends to be more reliably open than destination-dining spots that reduce hours or close entirely between ski season and the summer peak.

Reading the Menu Against the Room

American grill menus in this format typically anchor around burgers, sandwiches, and pub-style mains, with the craft beer list functioning as a structural counterpart to the food rather than an add-on. Squatters' brewing heritage positions the drinks side of the menu as genuinely programmatic rather than incidental, the beers are the product of a long-running Utah operation with recipes developed over decades in a state where brewing culture had to fight for its audience. That history gives the drinks list more coherence than most casual grill programs manage.

For a sense of how different the editorial ambition can be at the other end of the American dining spectrum, The French Laundry in Napa, Le Bernardin in New York City, and Lazy Bear in San Francisco represent the formal tasting-menu tier where sensory experience is engineered at a molecular level. Squatters operates from a completely different premise: that the leading version of après-ski eating is generous, familiar, and arrives without a waiting period long enough for the post-slope chill to set back in. That is a legitimate editorial position for a dining room at this address and price tier. For more ambitious Park City options at the fine-dining end, see our full Park City restaurants guide.

Planning Your Visit

Squatters Roadhouse Grill sits at 1900 Park Ave, Park City, UT 84060, in a corridor that is walkable from several lodging clusters near the resort base but requires a short drive or shuttle from Historic Main Street. Peak-season parking on Park Avenue can tighten during high-traffic weekends, particularly around Sundance in January. The roadhouse format typically operates without reservations in the conventional sense, though large groups in ski season should confirm current policy directly with the venue.

Signature Dishes
Huevos RancherosRoadhouse Bourbon Burger
Frequently asked questions

Nearby-ish Comparables

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Rustic
  • Cozy
Best For
  • Casual Hangout
  • Family
  • Group Dining
  • Brunch
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
  • Terrace
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
  • Beer Program
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Mountain
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityLarge
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Warm, welcoming pub atmosphere with cozy fireplace, moderate noise, and lively vibe.

Signature Dishes
Huevos RancherosRoadhouse Bourbon Burger