The effects of temperature and seasonal air-mass trajectories on stable water isotopes in alpine snowpacks are investigated using meteorological and snow-pit data at two alpine field sites in the Canadian Rocky Mountains: Haig Glacier, Alberta, and Opabin Glacier, British Columbia. Snow pits were sampled through three accumulation seasons (October–June, 2004/05, 2005/06 and 2006/07) for δ18O, δD, temperature and density. The isotopic characteristics of precipitation over these time periods, including the local meteoric waterline and average δ18O, δD and deuterium excess, were defined using this dataset. Individual snowfall events over the three seasons were identified in the accumulation records from both sites and then fit to snow-pit stratigraphies to determine their mean isotopic characteristics. A trajectory classification was produced for all events, and the key meteorological characteristics of each trajectory class were investigated using data from alpine field sites and a suite of meteorological records from the region. An analysis of the relative influences of temperature and air-mass trajectory on snow isotope ratios reveals some separation in mean δ18O between storm classes. However, the separation appears to be driven primarily by the mean temperature of each class rather then being a direct effect of vapour pathway.