Telluride in the Summer | 4 Days in Colorado's Most Stunning Town
- Emerson & Louise
- Feb 27
- 9 min read
Updated: Apr 23
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There are mountain towns that are beautiful.
And then there is Telluride

Tucked into a box canyon in the San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado, Telluride doesn't ease you in. The canyon walls rise 13,000 feet on three sides. A 365-foot waterfall drops off the east end like a curtain. A free gondola connects a Victorian mining town below to a European-style mountain village above, and in July, the wildflowers covering the alpine meadows are so thick and vivid you stop mid-sentence to point them out.
This is the exact Telluride summer 4 day itinerary we built for families who want more than scenery. Families who want to come home different.
“The mountains are calling and I must go.” — John Muir. Your kids will feel it too.
✈️ How to Get to Telluride, Colorado for a Luxury Family Vacation
Telluride is remote by design. That remoteness is part of what protects it from feeling like every other mountain resort town. Getting here is its own first experience, and you have two options worth knowing.
Telluride Regional Airport (TEX)
If you can get a direct flight, take it. TEX sits at 9,078 feet, and the approach between canyon walls is one of the most dramatic arrivals in American aviation. Book as early as possible — summer seats are scarce and the experience is worth the planning.
Montrose Regional Airport (MTJ)
The more reliably served option, with year-round connections to Denver and most major cities. The drive from Montrose to Telluride is approximately 65 miles through some of Colorado’s most stunning scenery — expect about 90 minutes, and treat it as the beginning of the experience, not just the transfer.
The Transfer
We do not recommend renting a car and navigating mountain roads the same day you fly in with children. The roads leading into Telluride wind through serious terrain, and after a travel day, tired kids in unfamiliar mountains is a stressful combination. Instead, do this:
Pre-book a luxury SUV car service from your arrival airport directly to your accommodations. Meet-and-greet service inside baggage claim, child seats arranged in advance, luggage handled.
The drive into Telluride — especially the final descent into the canyon — is one you want to be watching through the window, not concentrating on the road.
Crack the windows when you clear the mountains. Let them hear the altitude. Ask: “What do you think is at the top of those peaks?”
This is the first thing we coordinate when you book with Emerson & Louise. You land. Someone is already holding your name on a sign. The car is cold, the seats are clean, the driver knows your hotel. You made none of these calls.
🏨 Best Place to Stay in Telluride, Colorado in the Summer
The Madeline Hotel & Residences
This Forbes Five-Star property in Mountain Village is surrounded on three sides by 14,000-foot peaks and is the anchor of summer luxury travel in Telluride. Summer perks include outdoor movie nights, fire pit s’mores, heated pool, and the kind of staff that remembers your kids’ names by day two. The gondola is steps away. It’s walkable to dining, shopping, and the trails. This is home base.

The Peaks Resort & Spa
For families who want the most complete on-property experience, The Peaks is the answer. Colorado’s largest spa at 42,000 square feet means parents actually rest while the property keeps everyone occupied. Indoor climbing wall, pool, suite-style rooms with full kitchens, and ski-in/ski-out trail access in summer. This is the property where you could stay on grounds for a full day and not run out of things to do.

The Inn at Lost Creek
Ski-in/ski-out perfection in Mountain Village, steps from the gondola and lifts. What sets it apart from the competition is the daily breakfast buffet included with your stay — the only Telluride hotel that offers it — plus private rooftop hot tubs with unobstructed mountain views. Rooms come with steam showers, fireplaces, washers and dryers, and a staff that guests come back to year after year. For families who want luxury without sacrificing convenience on the mountain, this is the one.

🤍 Telluride Summer Itinerary | 4 Days in Colorado
Telluride doesn’t ask you to slow down. It just makes slowing down feel like the only thing worth doing. Here’s how four days in these mountains looks when every detail is handled for you.
DAY ONE | Arrive in Telluride, Colorado and Settle into the Mountains
Day one is intentionally light. Travel is its own form of adventure, and children need time to land in a new place before they can fully receive it.
1:00 PM Arrive & Explore the Property
Check in. Set down the bags. Then let the kids lead for an hour. The Mountain Village grounds — walking paths, mountain views in every direction, open alpine air — invite immediate, unstructured exploration. You don’t need to organize this. Just follow them.
3:00 PM First Gondola Ride Down to Historic Telluride
The free gondola ride from Mountain Village down to historic Telluride takes 13 minutes and crosses open alpine terrain with views straight across the canyon. It is, on its own, something kids don’t stop talking about. Ride it first thing, on purpose, with nowhere else to be. Once you're in town, wander Main Street in the late afternoon light. There is no agenda here.
6:30 PM Dinner at Rustico Ristorante
Rustico has been a Telluride institution for decades and remains one of the most warmly regarded dining experiences in town. Italian-inspired, locally sourced, with a river-rock fireplace patio and a wine list that takes itself seriously.
After Dinner The Intentional Moment: Canyon Stars
After dinner, walk away from Main Street toward the edge of town. At over 8,700 feet, removed from serious light pollution, the stars above Telluride’s box canyon are startling. Find a patch of open ground. Lie down with your kids and look up.

Ask them: “If we could travel to any star, which one would we visit?” Then listen. Don’t rush it. This is the moment that costs nothing and means everything.
DAY TWO | Bridal Veil Falls Hike & Golden Hour in Telluride, Colorado
Day two is built around two of the most memorable things this canyon offers: a sunrise photograph and an afternoon at the tallest waterfall in Colorado. We’ve sequenced them deliberately — quiet magic first, then spectacular second.
📸 Morning Photography Session
If you do one professional photography session on this trip — and you should — we will book it for 7:00 to 9:00 AM. Here’s exactly why:
The light is everything. The hour after sunrise in the canyon produces golden hour light that makes everything glow — skin, peaks, the alpine meadows. No studio can replicate it.
Kids are freshest before the day’s stimulation hits. You will get real laughter, not posed laughter.
10:00 AM Bridal Veil Falls
Colorado’s tallest free-falling waterfall drops 365 feet off the east wall of Telluride’s box canyon. In July, peak snowmelt means it is absolutely roaring. Plan to get wet. Bring an extra layer. Let the kids stand as close as they want.
1:00 PM River Trail Bike Ride
Pick up bike rentals from Boot Doctors in town — a local institution since 1983 — and take the paved River Trail along the San Miguel River through town. Mostly flat, deeply scenic, and the best way to see Telluride at a pace that lets you actually look.
7:00 PM Dinner at Allred’s
Allred’s sits at 10,551 feet at the top of the gondola, with floor-to-ceiling windows looking straight across the San Juan Mountains. Chef Adam Pace’s contemporary American menu is exceptional, but the views are the main event. Ride up at golden hour. Watch your kids press their faces against the glass at a mountain range that stretches to the horizon.

Reserve four to six weeks out minimum during July and August. This is the dinner they’ll bring up at Thanksgiving.
DAY THREE | Best Things to Do in Telluride, Colorado with Kids — Private Jeep Tour
Today is for awe. The kind that recalibrates a child’s sense of scale — that makes the world feel enormous and themselves feel brave inside it.
🚙 Morning: Private Guided Jeep Tour to Imogene Pass & Tomboy Ghost Town
The Imogene Pass and Tomboy Ghost Town private tour with Telluride Outside — the region’s gold-standard outfitter — is our single non-negotiable for this trip. Tomboy Road climbs directly from downtown Telluride through the Social Tunnel, past the old Smuggler Union Mine, to the ghost town of Tomboy perched above 11,000 feet.
Available late June through September. We book the private slot, confirm your guide, and brief the team on your family in advance so Day Three is tailored from the first turn of the wheel. You show up. The Jeep is there. The guide knows your kids’ names. You made none of these calls.
Afternoon Spa Hour at The Peaks
After a morning at altitude, the afternoon deserves to be genuinely restful. Return to the property. Let the kids decompress at the pool. Adults access The Peaks Spa — the largest spa in Colorado, with 32 treatment rooms and signature altitude recovery treatments. A massage after Imogene Pass is not an indulgence. It is a medical necessity.
7:00 PM Dinner at 221 South Oak
Chef Eliza Gavin — a former Top Chef contestant and author of three cookbooks — runs one of Telluride’s most distinctive fine dining rooms on a quiet side street downtown. The menu is creative, deeply seasonal, and reflects exactly what’s coming out of Colorado at peak summer.

Let your child stand at the summit of Imogene Pass at 13,114 feet and look out. Four states on a clear day. Watch their face. That is the memory.
DAY FOUR | How a Luxury Family Vacation in Telluride, Colorado Ends
☀️ Sunrise Walk: The Private Goodbye
Set your alarms for 6:15 AM. Dress quietly. Don’t rush. Walk out into Mountain Village before the resort is fully awake and find a spot where the peaks are visible on all sides. There is something about a high-altitude sunrise in a box canyon, witnessed as a family, that functions almost as a ceremony. Let it. Stand there for as long as your children will stand.
Before You Leave One Final Gondola Ride
Before departure, take one last gondola crossing — direction doesn’t matter. The 13-minute ride above the canyon is different every time depending on the light and the clouds.. Stand at the window. Let everyone look. Telluride earns a proper goodbye.
You didn’t just take your family on vacation. You showed them what it looks like to move through the world with intention, generosity, and wonder. That’s the Emerson & Louise way.
🎒 What to Pack for Telluride, Colorado in Summer With Kids
Telluride sits above 8,700 feet in the San Juan Mountains — the sun is stronger than families expect, afternoons bring fast-moving storms, and temperatures drop significantly at night even in July. These are the essentials we recommend for this Telluride, Colorado family vacation:
Supportive Trail Shoes
From the River Trail bike path to Bear Creek Falls to the slopes of Imogene Pass, your family will log serious miles on varied terrain. A pair like the New Balance Fresh Foam X 1080 keeps everyone comfortable across the full four days.
Polarized Sunglasses
High-altitude sun reflects off the canyon walls and alpine snowfields harder than most families expect. Ray-Ban Polarized Wayfarers cut the glare on open ridgelines and protect eyes during the Jeep tour summit.
Lightweight Packable Rain Jacket
San Juan Mountain afternoons in summer move fast. A Columbia Arcadia II Packable Jacket fits in a day bag, weighs almost nothing, and has saved more than one Telluride afternoon from an early end.
Altitude Hydration Essentials
Dehydration hits differently above 9,000 feet and kids rarely notice until they’re already behind. A Hydro Flask Standard Mouth keeps water cold through a full alpine day. Bring one per person and refill constantly.
Portable Phone Charger
Between golden hour photography, the Jeep tour summit, the gondola views, and the waterfall, your battery will not survive without an Anker PowerCore Portable Charger. Non-negotiable.
A Small Family Day Bag
The North Face Borealis carries sunscreen, layers, snacks, and everyone’s essentials without slowing anyone down on trail or in town.
Layers for the Jeep Tour Summit
At 13,114 feet, Imogene Pass runs 20–25 degrees colder than Telluride’s main street. Bring a mid-layer fleece and a wind shell for every family member on Day Three. We of course suggest our Emerson & Louise jacket.
A Travel Journal
The Peter Pauper Press Travel Journal is where your child writes down the one thing they want to remember. We build that closing moment into every Emerson & Louise itinerary. Bring one.
🎀 Travel With Purpose: The Emerson & Louise Foundation
Emerson Louise was our daughter’s full name. We lost her to brain cancer, and we built this in her honor — not as grief on display, but as love still moving in the world.
Every family we help create a memory for, every sunrise walk, every boat ride that lands, every child who catches their first fish in a cold mountain river — those moments matter more to us than they might to anyone else. Because we understand what it means to wish for more of them.
The Emerson & Louise Foundation carries her name forward by placing curated travel experiences with families navigating their hardest seasons. A portion of every booking funds this work.
She is why we do this. All of it.
Travel well. Travel with kindness. And remember — the mountains will be here when you need them most.
This trip doesn’t plan itself.
The private Jeep tour with Telluride Outside, the dinner reservations at Allred’s, the luxury car transfer from the airport, the spa appointments, the lodging in Mountain Village that actually has room for everyone — none of that happens without someone who knows how to make it happen.
That’s what we do. Reach out at emersonandlouise.com and we’ll start building your family’s mountain story from the first conversation.

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