Forecast for the Salt Lake Area Mountains
Monday morning, April 27, 2026
Bottom Line: Avalanche teams and backcountry riders have triggered numerous soft slab avalanches up to 18" deep over this storm cycle. While conditions will slowly stabilize in the coming days, caution is recommended in steep, previously wind drifted terrain. Remember that snow coverage is thin and rocky on all but the northerly aspects. Continue to practice your safe travel protocol - beacon checks, one-at-a-time, pay attention.
Regular avalanche forecasts have ended. We will issue intermittent updates and publish observations through May 1st. You can submit observations and avalanches HERE, and check out the most recent observations and avalanches HERE.
During the spring, there are typically three different avalanche problems:
- Wet Snow: Wet loose avalanches, wet slab avalanches, roof slides, and glide avalanches
- New Snow: New storm snow instabilities; soft slab avalanches and loose dry avalanches
- Wind Drifted Snow: Wind slabs; soft or hard drifts of wind-blown snow
