Find the perfect place to stay in Whistler
Few things in travel compare to waking up in the mountains and having the view meet you before you even leave your bed. A Whistler vacation rental with mountain views transforms every morning into something worth getting up for, whether that is the jagged white spine of Blackcomb Mountain catching the first light of the day, the broad face of Whistler Mountain draped in fresh snow, or the layered peaks of the Coast Mountains receding into the distance beyond Green Lake. In Whistler, mountain views are not a bonus feature. For many guests, they are the whole point.
Our collection of Whistler vacation rentals with mountain views spans the full valley, from slopeside condos and chalets with direct Blackcomb and Whistler Mountain vistas to elevated properties in Blueberry, Nicklaus North, and Wedgewoods where the views are nothing short of extraordinary. Whatever your budget, group size, or preferred neighborhood, we have a property that puts the mountains front and centre.
What to Look for in a Whistler Mountain View Rental
Not all mountain views are created equal, and in Whistler, the direction and elevation of a property makes a significant difference to what you will actually see. Properties in the Benchlands and Upper Village tend to offer close-up slopeside views of Blackcomb Mountain, with the runs, lifts, and glacier visible directly from your balcony or deck. Properties in Village North and Village Centre often frame both Whistler and Blackcomb Mountains together, giving you the full twin-peak panorama that Whistler is famous for. Elevated neighborhoods like Blueberry offer sweeping valley views with Alta Lake below and the surrounding Coast Mountain peaks on every horizon. Nicklaus North and Wedgewoods look south toward the full Whistler Valley with Wedge Mountain and the glaciated peaks of the northern Coast Mountains as a dramatic backdrop. Our reservations team knows every property in our collection and can help you find the view that matches what you are looking for.
Browse our full collection of Whistler vacation rentals with mountain views and find your perfect vantage point in the Sea to Sky corridor.
Tell us what you're looking for and someone will contact you with available options.
Whistler Traveler Favorites
Popular lodge & location searches
Popular neighbourhood searches
Popular amenitiy searches
Whistler BC Overview & Information
Taking a vacation in the idyllic town of Whistler is a great idea any time of year. Famous for having the largest skiable terrain of any ski resort in all of North America, Whistler has much more to offer regardless of your interest in hitting the slopes. This is a fantastic travel destination if you are passionate about mountain biking and the outdoors, experiencing stunning mountain vistas, dining in up-market restaurants and bars, playing golf, or renting a cabin and getting a feel for the quaint European-style, pedestrian-friendly village.
Like any destination, if you want to make the most out of your Whistler vacation, you are going to need not only the right vacation rental but the right information and research at your disposal which is why we have brought all of the key information about the world's best travel destination into one place for you.
Whistler sees on average around 3 million over-night and day visitors annually, with 45% of these visitors arriving during the winter months. This means that you won't be alone during your visit and will have the opportunity to meet many like-minded people.
A History and Overview of Whistler
Whistler and the surrounding areas hold thousands of years of history as these lands were the home of the Coast Salish First Nations before Europeans arrived, with Whistler serving as a valuable trading post between the Squamish and Lil'wat nations. Many of the hiking tracks around Whistler are actually the traditional routes of the Coast Salish peoples, and you can follow their paths to view nature and the landscape similarly to how they once did. You can also visit the Squamish-Lil'wat Cultural Centre to get a complete grasp of the region's history and identity.
Named "Whistler" thanks to the shrill sound that the local hoary marmot populations make, the early 1900s saw European settlement, first as a small hunting and fishing village, then as a successful mining town until the 1950s turned it into a popular summer vacation spot. The 1960s saw the first ski resort on the mountain open, and then in 2010, Whistler hosted the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.