
The New Zealand snow forecast keeps an ongoing storm in play through Friday, with the deepest totals favoring Canterbury and Mackenzie country while the Southern Lakes and Ruapehu see lighter, more intermittent snow. The strongest totals through Friday are focused on Mt. Hutt, Mount Dobson, and Porters, with Ohau also doing well. Snow quality trends dense to moderate during the wetter Canterbury bursts, winds are a real ski-quality factor, and current operations are uneven, so some of the biggest numbers are still base-building until closed or limited terrain opens.
The storm is already underway and continues Monday into Tuesday, with the individual models converging on the broad setup but still spread on peak intensity. The clearest focus is Canterbury and the central South Island, where snow should keep reloading Mt. Hutt, Porters, Mount Dobson, and Ohau; snow levels generally sit from about 400 to 1,400 meters during the wetter Canterbury periods, low enough for snow across the ski elevations. The models are closer on low South Island snow levels and strong exposed winds than on exact snowfall totals. SLRs run mostly 6 to 12 in the heavier Canterbury bursts, so expect dense to fair snow rather than especially light powder, while Ohau and Mount Dobson lean a bit lighter at times with SLRs closer to 10 to 13. Gusts over 100 km/h are possible around the strongest exposed Canterbury and Ruapehu periods, making lift reliability and surface quality variable.
Wednesday into Thursday brings another organized pulse, and the individual models remain aligned on renewed snow but diverge more on how hard the second wave hits each range. Confidence is strongest from Monday morning through Friday midday, July 6 to July 10, because that covers the ongoing storm and its final pulses without cutting the storm off early. Mt. Hutt and Porters keep the strongest Canterbury snowfall signal, Mount Dobson stays favored in the Mackenzie country, and Ruapehu gets a colder, windier reload Thursday with higher snow levels near 1,400 to 1,700 meters and dense SLRs near 5 to 7. At the time of the operating check, Mt. Hutt and The Remarkables had lift-served terrain open, Turoa and Whakapapa were limited, and Porters, Mount Dobson, and Treble Cone were not reporting open ski terrain, so the best totals do not automatically equal immediate lift-served access.
The weekend turns much quieter, with the individual models converging on only isolated light snow showers and fewer wind issues for Saturday and Sunday. Next Monday through Wednesday is more uncertain: several solutions bring another South Island round, but others are much weaker, and snow levels look higher, roughly 900 to 1,700 meters, which points to denser snow where it does fall. A realistic planning signal is broad, generally around 5-20 cm for favored higher terrain rather than a locked-in storm. Later next week carries another wetter signal in a few solutions, including possible Ruapehu and Canterbury involvement, but that is speculative enough to keep it as pattern potential rather than a totals forecast.
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New Zealand Snow Forecast Resort Totals (Mon Jul 06 – Fri Jul 10)
- Mt. Hutt – 103-145 cm
- Mount Dobson – 92-127 cm
- Porters – 76-107 cm
- Ohau – 40-55 cm
- Cardrona – 17-23 cm
- Turoa – 15-23 cm
- Whakapapa – 12-17 cm
- Treble Cone – 8-11 cm
- Coronet Peak – 8-11 cm
- The Remarkables – 7-10 cm