The best breweries in Winter Park and Fraser, Colorado — a local crawl

Winter Park Breweries


By Patrick Macklem- October 8, 2025

 

If you’re heading to Winter Park for powder days, mountain biking, or to chase aspens in the fall, there’s a very good chance you’ll want to end your adventures with a cold, well-made beer. Winter Park’s brewery scene — and the neighboring little mountain town of Fraser — punches way above its weight. Between cozy taprooms, dog-friendly patios, food trucks, and unexpected beer styles, these high-country breweries make Winter Park and Fraser a perfect après-beer destination. Below I’ve rounded up the tastiest, most character-filled breweries you shouldn’t miss when you’re in Winter Park and the Fraser valley.

Why Winter Park & Fraser are great beer country

Winter Park sits at the hub of Grand County’s outdoors life, and that outdoor energy bleeds into its pubs and breweries. After a day on the slopes, a long hike, or a bike ride on one of the local trails, Winter Park’s breweries offer the perfect counterpoint: a place to slow down, compare stories, and taste beers that often reflect the mountain environment (clean lagers, piney IPAs, roasty stouts). Fraser — just a few minutes up the road from Winter Park — has its own small but lively taproom scene where local brewers experiment and locals gather. If you’re planning a brewery crawl, you can easily make Winter Park your base and hop into Fraser for a neighborhood vibe that’s equal parts hometown and mountain-town quirky. Visit Winter Park+1

Hideaway Park Brewery — the Winter Park favorite

Hideaway Park Brewery is often the first name that comes up when people talk about Winter Park’s beer scene — and for good reason. This taproom nails that mountain-town vibe: warm, unpretentious, and focused on beer that fits the day’s weather and the crowd’s mood. Whether it’s a bright, crushable lager after a sunny hike or a more substantial amber after a cold day on the slopes, the rotating taps keep things interesting. The patio is a favorite for dog owners and those who like to watch the world pass by on a brisk mountain afternoon. If you want a quintessential Winter Park beer experience — friendly staff, a solid core lineup, and beers meant to be enjoyed with friends — start here. Hideaway Park Brewery+1

Big Trout Brewing — solid pub food and reliably great beer in Winter Park

If you’re craving pub grub with your pint in Winter Park, Big Trout Brewing is the place to land. Located in downtown Winter Park, Big Trout is a brewpub with a state-of-the-art brewhouse and a menu built for sharing: pretzel bites, hearty sandwiches, and nachos that pair perfectly with an IPA or a brown ale. Their roster of beers tends to skew approachable but carefully crafted — think sessionable pale ales, sturdy stouts, and well-balanced lagers — and they frequently have rotating seasonals and event brews that reward repeat visits. Big Trout is a dependable stop on any Winter Park brewery route for groups and families alike. bigtroutbrewing.com

Vicious Cycle Brewing — Fraser’s hometown spot (easy from Winter Park)

A short drive north of Winter Park takes you to Fraser, where Vicious Cycle Brewing brings a welcoming, community-forward spirit to the valley. Vicious Cycle’s story — owners who left routine lives to travel and then move into mountain brewing — matches the energy you feel in the taproom: adventurous but grounded. The brewery is known for approachable ales and rotating specials, plus a steady parade of food trucks and events that make it a true community hub. If you’re doing a Winter Park-focused trip, carve out time to pop into Fraser — Vicious Cycle gives a friendly, locally minded counterpoint to the busier Winter Park spots. Vicious Cycle Brewing

Camber Brewing — Fraser’s craft-forward neighbor

Also in Fraser, Camber Brewing brings a refined, small-batch approach to its beers. Camber has earned a reputation for thoughtful brewing — IPAs that aim for balance rather than brute force, crisp sours and saisons, and creative seltzer offerings for the non-beer crowd. The taproom is intimate and often lively, and their schedule of food trucks and events makes Camber a perfect stop for an easy evening after a day of exploring Winter Park’s trails or Fraser’s frozen ponds. If you want the quieter, experimental side of the valley’s beer scene, add Camber to your list. Camber Brewing Company+1

Fraser River Beer Co. — small, friendly, and delightfully local

For something truly local in Fraser, Fraser River Beer Co. is the kind of place that feels like a neighbor’s living-room taproom — cozy, welcoming, and proud of its small-batch offerings. Their tap list often includes house favorites and rotating seasonals, and they even pour non-alcoholic handcrafted sodas and kombucha for folks who are driving or just abstaining. The vibe is low-key and genuine: perfect for a slow afternoon catch-up or a warm-up stop before a scenic walk along the Fraser River. It’s a short and scenic drive from Winter Park and worth it for the intimacy and heart of the operation. Fraser River Beer CO+1

How to plan your Winter Park + Fraser brewery crawl

Start in Winter Park proper and work your way north into Fraser. A common route is to enjoy afternoon pints in Winter Park at Hideaway Park Brewery or Big Trout Brewing, then cruise to Fraser for evening taps at Vicious Cycle or Camber. Winter Park’s downtown area is compact — and many breweries are a short walk from each other — so you can sample a flight at one spot, grab a snack, and pop next door without losing momentum. If the weather is nice, pick breweries with patios; Winter Park gets gloriously sunny in summer and early fall, and those outdoor spaces are a highlight. Visit Winter Park

What to order — styles and local picks

Mountain breweries often lean into styles that match the outdoor lifestyle: crisp lagers and kölsch for recovery days, hazy or west-coast IPAs for hop lovers, and chocolatey stouts or roasty porters for cold nights. In Winter Park, look for session beers if you plan a multi-stop crawl; Big Trout and Hideaway Park both keep accessible, drinkable options on tap alongside more adventurous releases. In Fraser, sample a flight at Vicious Cycle or Camber to taste their range — that’s the quickest way to find the single beer that’ll make you want to take a growler (or crowler) home.

Beyond beer — food trucks, kombucha, and winter friendliness

One nice thing about the Winter Park — Fraser corridor is the variety of pairings. Winter Park’s brewpubs offer full kitchen options; in Fraser, small taprooms lean on food trucks that rotate through the patios. For non-beer drinkers, places like Fraser River Beer Co. pour house-made kombucha and non-alcoholic root beer so nobody feels left out. Winter visitors should also know that most of these breweries are dog-friendly — a big plus if you brought a four-legged hiking buddy. Fraser River Beer CO+1

A few local tips

  • Check taproom hours before you go: Winter Park and Fraser have seasonal rhythms and may tweak hours for shoulder seasons. bigtroutbrewing.com

  • Make a flight your friend: flights at local breweries are the fastest, most reliable way to explore the range without committing to full pours.

  • Bring layers: whether you’re in Winter Park in summer or winter, mountain weather changes fast — and patios are more comfortable with a sweater ready.

  • Support local events: many breweries host trivia nights, open-mic evenings, or live music — a great way to see the community side of Winter Park and Fraser.

Final pour — why these towns are worth the trip

Winter Park and Fraser are small towns with big-hearted brewery scenes. Winter Park gives you that classic mountain-town brewpub energy — approachable beers, easy access from the resort, and lively patios — while Fraser offers intimate, experimental, and community-focused taprooms that reward exploration. Between Hideaway Park Brewery, Big Trout, Vicious Cycle, Camber, and Fraser River Beer Co., you get a balanced cross-section of Colorado’s craft tendencies: quality, creativity, and a healthy dose of mountain hospitality. Whether you’re chasing powder in winter or flowers in summer, plan to leave room in your itinerary for a beer (or two) — the taps in Winter Park and Fraser will be waiting.

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