You have to be careful with Whistler Premier. It seems they rent a lot of properties, many in…read morereputable developments, but Whistler Premier's suites can be quite beaten down.
We stayed in Painted Cliff #29. It was reasonably priced (for Whistler). There's a reason for that.
The positive: It was, in fact, a ski-in-ski-out property (even in a terrible snow year, in the spring), with a hot tub and parking included. It did have two full bedrooms, which at the price we paid (still crazy but not for Whistler), is a bargain.
The negative: There's a reason why it's reasonably priced. The unit is dated and our condo hadn't been updated in decades. Beyond the dated decoration, that means that while the whole development is now officially non-smoking, it wasn't in the past. #29 definitely had a smoking owner in the past. You can smell it when you walk in -- it's that smell of old concrete '60s and '70s hotels where smoking happened for decades and then they tried to cover it up with some sort of cheap spray that didn't really do the job. So the whole time you have to live with the smell of cheap spray with a strong undertone of cigarette smoke.
Also, Whistler Premier doesn't clean or maintain its properties very well. The decaying doormat said it all at the entry. The washroom, kitchen counters, and glasses were clean. But none of the cookware was: to cook, we had to scrub all the dirty pans first. There was a real fireplace but all the tools were broken. Also, though their in-room materials said they had left a fire log, they did not. And the wifi information on the in-room materials was outdated.
The mattresses were old, hard, and very cheap. Don't expect a good night's sleep when any move in the bed creaks, and you have to move a lot because the mattress is so bad. Pillows were completely flat. Even my kid, who will sleep anywhere, complained about her bed.
On top of it all, though not necessarily Whistler Premier's fault (except for renting the least desirable units in older developments): #29 is right next to the hot tub, which is great until you have to listen to kids banging the gate shut repeatedly as they run in and out, or to adults partying later at night. The parking spots assume that everyone drives a Smart car -- they're not wide enough for normal cars. We had to use visitor parking because the owner in the spot next to us yelled at us because she couldn't get out of her minivan (which was her fault for insisting on backing in -- we were parked as far over as we could go in our space but the car on the other side of her space was parked over the line and she couldn't get out on that side).
It was fine for a reasonably priced, 2- night getaway to Whistler. But it wouldn't work for longer.