Chamrousse, France: Family Ski Guide
Olympic downhill slopes, €28.50 kids, 45 minutes from Grenoble.
Last updated: March 2026
Chamrousse
France
Chamrousse
Book Chamrousse if your kids are beginners, your budget matters more than terrain variety, and you prefer a quiet French mountain over a crowded international resort. At EUR 44/day for adults, it is among the cheapest skiing in the French Alps. The 1968 Olympic heritage gives the slopes more character than their modest size suggests.Check multi-day pass pricing on the RRMC ticketing page at chamrousse.com for your dates. Search self-catering residences at 1700 for the best balance of convenience and price.Do not book Chamrousse if your family includes confident intermediate-plus skiers. They will be bored by day three. Serre Chevalier offers 250km for about 40% more per day. Alpe d'Huez is bigger still. Villard-de-Lans is a similar-scale alternative with a real town centre if Chamrousse's architecture puts you off.
Dieser Reiseguide ist derzeit auf Englisch verfügbar. Wir arbeiten an der deutschen Version!
Ist Chamrousse gut für Familien?
Chamrousse is the closest resort to Grenoble (30 min), with 90km of terrain, 60% beginner-rated, and EUR 44 adult day passes. The 1968 Olympic venue works best for families with kids 3 to 10 who are learning on a budget. The catch: experienced skiers cover everything in a day, the village has no real centre, and English is limited. For more terrain, Alpe d'Huez is 90 minutes away with four times the skiing.
At 90 km of slopes served by only 16 lifts, any skier beyond beginner-intermediate will exhaust the terrain within two days and feel the ceiling of what this small domain can offer.
Biggest tradeoff
Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?
The ski area splits across three base zones, 1650, 1700, and 1750, named after their altitude in metres, not their quality ranking. First-time visitors sometimes worry they've booked the "cheap" sector; they haven't. All three feed into the same 90 km of interconnected slopes.
For beginners, the progression is clean. At Chamrousse 1700, the main hub, a dedicated beginner zone with drag lifts and gentle gradients keeps first-timers separated from the through-traffic of more experienced skiers. Children in the ESF Les Marmots programme work these lower slopes first, moving from tapis roulant (magic carpet) to short drags before their instructor decides they're ready for the Bachat Bouloud chairlift at 1750, a genuine milestone moment, because from there, gentle blue runs wind back down with views across the Belledonne range to the Chartreuse massif beyond.
The intermediate heart of the mountain sits between 1700 and the summit at 2250m, accessed via the La Croix gondola from 1650. This is where the 1968 Olympic slalom and giant slalom courses ran, and the runs retain that character: sustained pitch, consistent fall line, well-groomed. On a clear Tuesday in January, you might share them with twenty other skiers.
That emptiness is the payoff for a domain this size.
For advanced skiers and confident teens, the honest picture is this: you'll find a handful of engaging red runs and the occasional steep section, but nothing that demands real commitment. A strong skier will cover every marked run in a day and a half. If your teenager is hungry for challenging terrain, consider a day trip to Alpe d'Huez (90 minutes by car), it offers 250 km and genuine black-run variety that Chamrousse simply cannot match.
The free shuttle bus linking all three bases runs regularly and matters more than you'd think. Families staying at 1750 who want the gondola at 1650 need it. It's reliable, but build ten minutes of buffer into your morning if small children are involved.

Trail Map
Full CoverageTerrain by Difficulty
Based on 112 classified runs out of 154 total
© OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL
Planning Your Trip
💬Was sagen andere Eltern?
Day one, head to Chamrousse 1700. It's the main services hub, ticket office, rental shops, restaurants, and the ESF meeting point are all within a short walk. Rent equipment here rather than at 1650 or 1750; the concentration of hire shops at 1700 means better availability and easier comparison. Budget 30-40 minutes for a family of four to get fitted, longer during Saturday changeover days when French school-holiday families flood in.
ESF ski school registration should be done online in advance through the ESF Chamrousse site. For Les Marmots (ages 3+), you'll need your child's health book (carnet de santé), a blanket, and spare clothing changes, they take the paperwork seriously. Request an English-speaking instructor when booking, not on the morning. ESF is a national institution with standardised progression levels, so lesson quality is consistent, but English proficiency among instructors varies.
After morning lessons, the restaurants clustered around 1700 are your easiest lunch option, walk, don't shuttle. Collect children from Les Marmots at the agreed time; the staff handle transitions between childcare and ski lessons during the day, so your child isn't standing around waiting.
Signage across the resort defaults to French. Download a translation app before you arrive.
Families on the Slopes
(8 photos)Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.
🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?
Chamrousse accommodation is overwhelmingly self-catering résidences de tourisme, apartment-style units with kitchenettes, sold Saturday-to-Saturday during French school holidays. Mid-week arrivals outside peak weeks are possible but less common.
We have limited verified data on specific properties and pricing. Budget lodging starts from approximately €88 per night based on extracted data, though we cannot confirm which property or platform this refers to. For current availability, check booking.fr and the official chamrousse.com accommodation page directly.
Here's how to choose your base. Chamrousse 1700 puts you closest to the main concentration of restaurants, the ESF meeting point, rental shops, and the small shopping centre, the most convenient base for families with young children who don't want to rely on the shuttle for every errand. Chamrousse 1750 is quieter, mainly residential, with direct access to the Bachat Bouloud chairlift and a handful of restaurants and ski hire shops, better for families who prefer a calm base and don't mind the shuttle or a walk to 1700. Chamrousse 1650 is the gondola base and main arrival point from Grenoble, with a mix of accommodation and services, but feels more like a transit hub than a village centre.
The serious budget option: stay in Grenoble itself. A two-bedroom city apartment for €60-80 per night puts you in a university city with supermarkets, restaurants, and pharmacies at your doorstep. The 45-60 minute commute is real, but so are the savings.
Was kosten die Liftpässe?
Chamrousse's pricing sits well below the French Alpine average, and the structure rewards families who plan ahead, even slightly.
The headline: an adult day pass is €44 at the window, €42 if purchased online through the RRMC (Régie Remontées Mécaniques Chamrousse) ticketing system. A child day pass is €28.50. That means a family of four, two adults, two children under 12, pays €145 at the window for a full ski day. At Alpe d'Huez, the equivalent day would run you north of €200.
The half-day pass is where budget families should focus. At €39 adult standard (€37 online) for four consecutive hours, it matches how young children actually ski. If your five-year-old is done by 1pm, and they will be, you're paying for the hours you use rather than subsidising an empty afternoon.
Multi-day pass pricing drops sharply. French Alpine resorts routinely price 6-day passes at under 50% of the equivalent daily rate. We don't have Chamrousse's exact multi-day figures for 2026-27 in our dataset, but check the RRMC site directly, the maths almost always favours buying five or six days upfront over singles, even if you skip a day mid-week.
The Grenoble commute hack deserves its own line. Families staying in Grenoble, where a two-bedroom apartment runs €60-80 per night on booking platforms, can drive 45-60 minutes each morning, ski until early afternoon, and drive back. You lose an hour each way but eliminate resort accommodation costs entirely. For a three-day ski trip with small children, this can cut total spending by €300-400 compared to staying slope-side.
One more detail for the Kowalski-style budget family: online pre-purchase saves only €2 per adult per day, but across a family of four over five days, that's €20 back in your pocket. Enough for a round of crêpes.
Planning Your Trip
✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Chamrousse?
Most families will drive from Grenoble. The D111 climbs steadily for 45-60 minutes through the Belledonne valley, scenic, manageable, but snow chains are legally required in your boot between November and March (and practically required on the final kilometres). Free parking is available at all three base areas, though the 1650 lot fills first on weekends because it serves the La Croix gondola.
Grenoble itself is well-connected. TGV trains from Paris Gare de Lyon arrive in roughly three hours; Lyon is one hour by rail. From Grenoble station, you'll need a rental car or pre-booked transfer, there is no regular public bus service to Chamrousse. Transfer companies operate shared shuttles during peak season, but schedules are limited and predominantly French-language.
Grenoble-Alpes Isère Airport handles some European routes (primarily budget carriers), but Lyon-Saint Exupéry is the more reliable gateway, with a 90-minute drive to the resort via Grenoble. Geneva is 2.5 hours by road if you're comparing flights.
Flying into Lyon and renting a car gives the best balance of flight choice and transfer simplicity. Book the car with snow chains included, it's a €20-30 add-on that beats scrambling at a petrol station.

☕Was gibt's abseits der Piste?
At 4pm, Chamrousse 1700 has the quiet hum of a local mountain winding down rather than the engineered buzz of a resort village. A few families linger outside the restaurants near the small shopping centre. Children in ski boots clump past. It's low-key in a way that feels honest rather than neglected.
The standout non-ski activity is the Arselle plateau at 1600m, a flat, forested snowshoe circuit that Grenoble families have used for generations as a gentle alternative to the slopes. It's documented as accessible with a Yoyo² pushchair fitted with ski-wheel attachments, tested in February 2023 by a Grenoble local. If you have a baby and an older child in ski school, this is your morning: a quiet walk through snow-covered forest with a sleeping infant while the seven-year-old learns to snowplough.
Few ski resorts offer anything this practical for parents with pre-ski-age children.
The Luge Coaster toboggan run operates during winter season and autumn half-term, giving non-skiing family members (or post-skiing families looking for a 4pm activity) a ticketed ride that doesn't require ski equipment. The Sledging Park provides a simpler, younger-child-friendly alternative.
We don't have verified data on specific restaurant names, menus, or price points at Chamrousse. The main concentration of dining is at 1700, with additional options at 1650 and 1750. French Alpine resort restaurants typically serve tartiflette, raclette, and plat du jour menus in the €12-18 range, but we'd rather flag the gap than guess at specifics.
For a full non-ski day, Grenoble is an hour away and offers the Bastille cable car, the Musée de Grenoble, and city-centre shopping that no mountain village can replicate.

When to Go
Season at a glance — color-coded by family score
Common Questions
Everything families ask about this resort
Have a question we didn't cover? We'd love to add it to our guide.
Unser Fazit
Würden wir Chamrousse empfehlen?
Was es wirklich kostet
Chamrousse is one of the cheapest lift tickets in the French Alps. At EUR 44/day for adults, you are paying roughly half of Alpe d'Huez and a third of Chamonix.
The budget family with self-catering, packed lunches, and a few half-days of group ski school: plan around EUR 1,730 for a week for four. That is less than some families spend on lift passes alone at the Three Valleys.
The comfortable family upgrading to a mid-range apartment, eating out most nights, adding private lessons: around EUR 2,800. Still less than a budget week at Chamonix or Val d'Isere.
The day-trip family driving up from Grenoble three or four times with half-day passes and packed lunches can keep total ski spend under EUR 600. That is a French Alps ski holiday for less than a long weekend at many destination resorts. Chamrousse's value is hard to argue with if the terrain fits your family's level.
Your smartest money move: Buy half-day afternoon passes and drive up from Grenoble for day trips. Four or five visits across a winter costs less than a single day at the Three Valleys.
Worauf ihr achten müsst
At 90km across 16 lifts, any skier beyond beginner-intermediate will exhaust the terrain in two days. There is no hidden bowl, no surprise chute. A confident teenager will feel trapped by Wednesday. Alpe d'Huez or Serre Chevalier will hold their interest for a full week.
Chamrousse serves Grenoble's local market, and the infrastructure reflects it: signage, menus, childcare registration all run in French. You can navigate it, but you will work harder than at internationally-oriented Alpe d'Huez. Parents filling out French-language health forms while managing a three-year-old in ski boots will feel that friction.
The 1,650-2,250m altitude range is reasonable but not exceptional. A low-snow year will hurt Chamrousse more than Val Thorens at 2,300m or even Alpe d'Huez with its extensive snowmaking.
If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Villard-de-Lans for a real town with more character at similar prices.
Würden wir Chamrousse empfehlen?
Book Chamrousse if your kids are beginners, your budget matters more than terrain variety, and you prefer a quiet French mountain over a crowded international resort. At EUR 44/day for adults, it is among the cheapest skiing in the French Alps. The 1968 Olympic heritage gives the slopes more character than their modest size suggests.
Check multi-day pass pricing on the RRMC ticketing page at chamrousse.com for your dates. Search self-catering residences at 1700 for the best balance of convenience and price.
Do not book Chamrousse if your family includes confident intermediate-plus skiers. They will be bored by day three. Serre Chevalier offers 250km for about 40% more per day. Alpe d'Huez is bigger still. Villard-de-Lans is a similar-scale alternative with a real town centre if Chamrousse's architecture puts you off.
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