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Haute-Savoie, France

Morillon, France: Family Ski Guide

€48.80 kids, 265km mountain, skiing through fir trees like Quebec.

Family Score: 7.7/10
Ages 4-12

Last updated: March 2026

User photo of Morillon - unknown
7.7/10 Family Score
7.7/10

France

Morillon

Book Morillon if you want the quietest possible family holiday in the Grand Massif. A handful of chalets, a church, a direct gondola, and 265km of skiing waiting at the top. Your kids will have space to learn without crowds, and you will have silence after bedtime.Book ESF lessons early for February. Then search the tourism office or Booking.com for the limited apartment inventory. Fly into Geneva (65 min).If the village is too quiet (and it is very quiet), Samoens is 10 minutes away with more restaurants and shops but the same Grand Massif access. Les Carroz has more going on still. Flaine eliminates the gondola commute entirely. Morillon is for families who specifically want peace and simplicity.

Beste Zeit: January
Alter 4–12
You want a quieter, less-crowded alternative to mega-resorts during school holidays
You need guaranteed snow — Morillon village sits at only 650m and snow reliability at base is poor
🌐

Dieser Reiseguide ist derzeit auf Englisch verfügbar. Wir arbeiten an der deutschen Version!

Ist Morillon gut für Familien?

Kurz & knapp

Morillon is the quietest village in the Grand Massif: a tiny Savoyard community with a direct gondola into 265km of terrain. Scores 7.7 for families, best for kids 4 to 12 who are learning. The catch: very small with limited facilities, daily gondola commute, and advanced skiers will want Flaine's sectors above. For Grand Massif with more village life, try Samoens. For zero commute, that is Flaine.

You need guaranteed snow — Morillon village sits at only 650m and snow reliability at base is poor

Biggest tradeoff

⛷️

Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?

45% Good for beginners

Your kid will earn their first ski medal in a village so quiet you can hear cowbells from the slopes. Morillon is a back door into the Grand Massif ski area (265 km of pistes shared with Flaine, Samoens, and Les Carroz), but the village itself is a tiny, traffic-free Savoyard hamlet where children walk to ski school independently by day two.

The Morillon 1100 base (accessible by telecabine from the village) has a dedicated children's area called the Marvel zone. Magic carpets, gentle gradients, a snow garden, and a sheltered learning space that keeps beginners warm and protected. It is one of the best-designed children's learning areas in the French Alps.

Ski School

The ESF Morillon takes children from age 3. Group lessons run EUR 30-40 per half day. The village is small enough that class sizes rarely exceed 8 children, even in peak weeks. The French medal system (Piou Piou through 3rd Star) gives kids tangible progression goals.

  • Piou Piou (3-5): Snow garden and first slides
  • Group lessons (6+): Access to the Grand Massif as ability grows
  • English instruction: Available but request early. French is the default.

Grand Massif Connection

From Morillon 1100, your family accesses the full Grand Massif. The terrain above Morillon is particularly family-friendly: wide blue runs through forests, well-groomed, and rarely crowded. Advanced skiers can reach Flaine's bowl for steeper terrain. The connection is seamless, but you never need to leave the Morillon sector if your kids are still building confidence.

On-Mountain Food

Mountain restaurants above Morillon serve traditional Savoyard fare at prices below what you would pay in Flaine or Les Carroz. Expect tartiflette, crepes, and hearty soups for EUR 10-15 per adult. Kids' menus run EUR 7-10.

User photo of Morillon

Trail Map

Full Coverage
Trail stats are being verified. Check the interactive map below for current trail info.

© OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL

📊The Numbers

MetricValue
Family Score
7.7Very good
Best Age Range
4–12 years
Kid-Friendly Terrain
45%Above average
Childcare Available
Yes
Ski School Min Age
3 years
Kids Ski Free
Under 5

Score Breakdown

Value for Money

9.0

Convenience

8.0

Things to Do

5.0

Parent Experience

7.5

Childcare & Learning

6.5

Planning Your Trip

💬Was sagen andere Eltern?

"Our four-year-old walked to ski school alone on the third day. We watched from the balcony." That level of childhood independence, unthinkable at a bigger resort, is what sets Morillon apart for families. The village is so small, so car-free, and so quiet that parents trust the environment in a way they cannot at most ski destinations.

What Parents Love

  • Marvel children's area: "The best-designed beginner zone we have used in France." Parents compare it favorably to the children's areas at much larger and more expensive resorts.
  • Geneva transfer: "65 minutes from the airport. Our baby slept the whole way." The short transfer is cited as the top practical reason for choosing Morillon.
  • Quiet village: "No traffic, no crowds, no stress." Parents of children under 6 consistently rank the peacefulness as the primary appeal.

The Honest Gaps

  • Limited nightlife: "After 8pm, the village is asleep." Parents who want apres-ski energy need to drive to Samoens or Flaine.
  • English variable: "Our ski instructor spoke mostly French." Request English speakers when booking. Independent schools may have better English availability than the ESF.
  • Small village: "We ran out of restaurant options by day four." Self-catering or willingness to drive to Samoens helps.

Morillon is the French ski village for families who have done the big resorts and realized that what they actually want is simplicity: a short transfer, ski-in/ski-out lodging, excellent beginner terrain, and a setting quiet enough that their kids play outside unsupervised. It does not try to be anything else, and that clarity is its greatest strength.

Families on the Slopes

(4 photos)

Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.


🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?

Book a self-catering apartment at Morillon 1100 (also called Les Esserts) for direct access to the slopes and the children's learning area. You step out the door and you are on snow. No car, no shuttle, no morning logistics.

  • Morillon 1100 residences: Ski-in/ski-out apartments from EUR 500-1,200/week for a 2-bedroom depending on season
  • Morillon village (700m): Chalets and apartments from EUR 400-900/week. Take the telecabine (included in lift pass) up to the slopes each morning. Quieter, more authentic village feel.
  • Hotels: Limited options. The village has a handful of small hotels and guesthouses from EUR 70-120/night.

Morillon village has a small Sherpa supermarket, bakery, and a few restaurants. For a full grocery shop, drive 10 minutes to Samoens or Cluses. Self-catering is the budget strategy here since restaurant dining in Haute-Savoie adds up fast.

The telecabine from Morillon village to Morillon 1100 runs throughout the day and is covered by the Grand Massif lift pass. Families staying in the village get a scenic 8-minute ride up to the slopes, which kids enjoy as part of the daily routine.

💡
PRO TIP
Morillon 1100 apartments book out early for French school holidays. Reserve by October for February weeks.

🎟️

Was kosten die Liftpässe?

You get 265 km of skiing for prices that undercut the bigger Haute-Savoie resorts. The Grand Massif pass covers Morillon, Flaine, Samoens, Les Carroz, and Sixt, and it costs less than a Portes du Soleil or Trois Vallees pass.

  • Grand Massif adult day pass: EUR 48-56 depending on season
  • Children (5-14): Roughly 30% off adult rates
  • Under 5: Free
  • 6-day pass: EUR 240-280 for adults
  • Morillon-only pass: Available for the local sector at reduced rates

The beginner area magic carpets at Morillon 1100 are free, so true first-timers can try skiing without buying a pass. Buy the Grand Massif pass when your child is ready to ride the chairlifts and explore beyond the learning zone.

Family discounts apply when purchasing for 3+ family members. Online advance purchase saves 5-10%. No Ikon or Epic affiliation.

💡
PRO TIP
If your kids are in ski school all day and you want to explore the Grand Massif alone, the adult day pass gives you access to Flaine (excellent expert terrain) and the 14km blue run from Tete des Saix back to Samoens. You can ski a different sector each day and still pick up the kids in Morillon by 4pm.

Planning Your Trip

✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Morillon?

Sixty-five minutes from Geneva Airport, one of the shortest transfers in the French Alps. That brevity is a major selling point for families traveling with young children who have limited tolerance for post-flight car journeys.

  • Geneva Airport (GVA): 65 minutes by car via the A40 motorway. Easy, well-signed route.
  • Lyon Airport (LYS): 3 hours. More flight options from some destinations.
  • Transfers: Shared shuttles from Geneva cost EUR 30-45 per person. Private transfers EUR 180-250 per car.

A rental car from Geneva is recommended for self-catering families who want to shop at the Carrefour in Cluses (15 minutes from Morillon). If you are staying at Morillon 1100 with a fully stocked kitchen, a car also lets you explore Samoens and the valley on rest days.

The drive from Geneva is autoroute until the Cluses exit, then a well-maintained valley road to Morillon. Snow tires or chains are required from November to March for the mountain road. The Morillon village road is gently graded, not hairpin switchbacks.

💡
PRO TIP
Fly in on Sunday morning if possible. Saturday changeover traffic in the Haute-Savoie is heavy, and a Sunday arrival means quieter roads and an easier first day.
User photo of Morillon

Was gibt's abseits der Piste?

By 5pm your kids will be sledding down a dedicated toboggan run at Morillon 1100, and you will be watching from the terrace of your apartment with a glass of Savoyard wine. The contained setup at Morillon 1100 means evening activities happen right where you are staying, with no driving required.

  • Toboggan run: Dedicated sledding area at Morillon 1100, accessible from the residences
  • Ice rink: In Samoens (10 minutes away), open afternoons and evenings
  • Swimming pool: The Samoens aquatic center has pools and water slides
  • Winter walks: Cleared paths through the Morillon forest along the Giffre river

Dining

Morillon village has a handful of restaurants, enough for a week without repetition:

  • Le Morillon: Traditional Savoyard cuisine in a cozy village setting
  • Creperies and pizzerias: Kid-friendly options at EUR 8-12 per child
  • Samoens restaurants: The neighboring town (10 minutes) has more variety including international options

The village atmosphere is intentionally quiet. No nightclub, no crowded bars. Families walk through the village after dinner, kids run ahead through cleared paths, and the sound of the Giffre river fills the gaps. It is the kind of peaceful evening that makes you wonder why you ever fought for a restaurant reservation at a bigger resort.

💡
PRO TIP
Wednesday is often market day in Samoens. The weekly market sells local cheese, sausages, and baked goods that will stock your apartment kitchen with ingredients better than any supermarket.
User photo of Morillon

When to Go

Season at a glance — color-coded by family score

Best: January
Season Arc — Family Scores by MonthA semicircular visualization showing ski season months color-coded by family recommendation score.JanFebMarAprDecJFMADGreat for familiesGoodFairNo data
🎿 The Beginner Machine

How Good Is Morillon for Beginner Skiers?

## The Beginner Machine Morillon's beginner setup works because of geography. The resort splits into two levels: the traditional village down at 650m and Morillon 1100 (Les Esserts) up above, connected by a 10-person gondola. Nearly all beginner learning happens at Morillon 1100, where a dedicated zone keeps first-timers completely separated from the main traffic of the Grand Massif. With 45% of the terrain classified as kid-friendly, there's genuinely no rush to leave the comfort zone. Your 4-year-old's Day 1 starts at the Village des Enfants (Children's Village) at Morillon 1100. This is the meeting point for all young beginners, and it doubles as a daycare, so the handoff is smooth. Kids aged 3 go into Club Piou Piou, which combines one hour of actual ski instruction with supervised play. Four and five-year-olds get longer sessions, with morning or afternoon lessons running roughly two hours. The nursery handles the transitions, walking your child to and from the snow, which means you don't need to stand around in the cold orchestrating logistics. The beginner area itself features the Essertoux magic carpet, the Télédébutant drag lift, and the Esserts chairlift. That's a proper three-stage progression: carpet for absolute first-timers, drag lift once they can snowplough with some control, and chairlift when they're ready for short green runs. A dedicated Morillon beginner pass covers just these lifts for €24.80 per day for adults and €19.80 for children 8 to 14. Under 8s ski free. That's a fraction of the full Grand Massif pass and exactly right for someone who won't leave the nursery slopes on Day 1. Or Day 3. Two ski schools operate here. ESF Morillon is the big operation with 65 instructors (English speakers available), running group lessons of 6 to 10 children through the French medal progression system. Five half-day group lessons cost €185; add daycare wrapping and it's €298 for five half-days. ESI Zig Zag Morillon is the alternative, and they cap groups at 8, dropping to just 6 for young beginners. If your child wilts in big groups or needs more attention, Zig Zag is worth the look. For the nervous 40-year-old? Same beginner area, same gentle gradient, and honestly the same magic carpet. Adult group lessons through ESF run in 2h15 to 2h30 sessions. The beauty here is that Morillon's beginner zone doesn't funnel into anything intimidating. There's no accidental "well, the only way down is this red run" situation. You practice, you ride the drag lift back up, you practice again. When you're ready, the long green runs through the trees toward the village are the graduation route. That famous Marvel run is a 5km gentle descent that makes intermediates out of cautious beginners by mid-week. Honest timeline: most adults in decent shape go from pizza wedge to linking parallel turns in three to five days of lessons. Kids aged 4 to 6 typically need a full week to earn their Ourson (bear) medal and feel genuinely independent on green runs. The bottleneck isn't terrain or lift capacity. It's the gondola connection between village and Morillon 1100 during morning rush, when every ski school class, rental-laden parent, and late riser converges on the same cabin. Get up there early or stay up there. That's the move.
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Which Family Are You?

Which Families Is Morillon Best For?

The First-Timer Family

Great match

This is your resort. With 45% of the terrain suited to beginners, your kids won't get funnelled onto runs they're not ready for, and you won't spend the week white-knuckling it on blues that feel like reds. The <strong>ESF Morillon</strong> runs Club Piou Piou from age 3 with daycare built in, so your littlest can do a one-hour ski taster while being looked after the rest of the morning. Tree-lined runs mean good visibility on flat-light days, which is exactly when first-timers need it most.

Book into Morillon 1100 (Les Esserts), the mid-station area where the beginner slopes, ski school meeting points, and children's village are all within walking distance. The Marvel run, a 5km green through the trees back to the village, will be the highlight of your kids' week.

📅 The Week

What Does a Week at Morillon Look Like?

## The Week **Day 1** is never pretty. You'll haul bags from the car to your apartment, realize you forgot the kids' neck warmers, and spend forty minutes in a rental shop while a teenager adjusts boot buckles. The Morillon gondola carries you from the village at 650m up to Les Esserts at 1100, and that first ride feels like an orientation flight: the kids press faces to glass, you silently calculate how long this is all going to take. Dinner is whatever you can scrape together from the Sherpa supermarket because nobody has the energy for anything else. **Day 2** is the system boot. You drop the little ones at ESF Morillon's Club Piou Piou up at 1100 and discover the meeting point situation. There's a learning curve to the learning curve. Meanwhile, you take your first proper turns on the Sairon piste, a long, gentle cruiser that lets you remember how your legs work. The trees are dense, almost Canadian. You eat a forgettable but warm lunch on the mountain, overpay slightly, and feel fine about it. Collecting kids from ski school involves one crying child and one who doesn't want to leave. Classic. **Day 3** is when the holiday actually starts. The kids begin finding their edges. You finally notice the views. With 45% of the terrain suited to beginners and younger skiers, there's no pressure to push anyone up a level too soon. You ride the Marvel run for the first time, a gorgeous 5km green that winds through the forest and deposits you back toward the village. It becomes the family's daily closer, the run everyone agrees on. That evening, you eat at Café-Hôtel Le Morillon in the village and let the kids have hot chocolate for dessert because you've stopped keeping score. **Day 4** is adventure day. You ski over toward Samoëns through the Coulouvrier sector, and the Grand Massif suddenly reveals its scale. The kids stay in lessons while you and your partner explore properly for the first time. The trees thin out, the views open up, and for twenty minutes you forget you're responsible for other humans. You're back in time for pickup, slightly sunburned, conspicuously relaxed. ESI ZigZag, the other ski school in town, has small groups capped at 8, and parents in your building swear by them. You make a mental note for next time. **Day 5** is the rest day nobody fights about. You walk through the old village, buy cheese from a shop you can't pronounce, and let the kids build something structural in the snow outside your apartment. Nobody mentions skiing. Nobody checks the piste map. The quiet is the point. Morillon's village doesn't try to entertain you, and that's exactly what you needed. **Day 6** is the payoff. Your youngest snowploughs the entire Marvel run without stopping. Your eldest tackles a blue they'd been eyeing all week. You ski together as a family for the first time without anyone melting down, and there's a moment on the Sairon piste, all four of you in a line through the trees, where nobody says anything because nobody needs to. **Day 7** is packing. It's always packing. But you're already looking at February half-term dates in the gondola queue, and that tells you everything.

Common Questions

Everything families ask about this resort

It's one of the best French Alps picks for little ones learning to ski. 45% of the terrain is beginner-friendly, and the famous Marvel run, a 5km green gliding through the trees, is the kind of run kids beg to do again. The whole resort connects into the Grand Massif's 265km of pistes, so parents who want more challenge can explore Flaine and Samoëns while the kids stick to the gentle stuff.

The ESF Morillon takes kids from age 3 in their Club Piou Piou program, 5 half-days of daycare plus ski intro runs €261. For kids 4 and up, 5 half-days of daycare combined with proper ski lessons costs €298. Standalone group lessons for older children start at €185 for 5 sessions. The Village des Enfants daycare accepts children from 18 months if you just need someone watching the littlest ones while you ski.

A Grand Massif adult day pass is €61 and a child pass (ages 8-14) is €48.80. Kids under 8 ski free, just show proof of age at the ticket office. If you're keeping beginners on the nursery slopes, the Morillon beginner pass is only €24.80/day for adults and €19.80 for kids. The Grand Massif also offers a Family Pack with a 10% discount, so always ask.

Fly into Geneva, it's the closest major airport at about 50 minutes by car, making it one of the shortest transfers in the French Alps. The resort is 15 minutes off the A40 motorway, so self-driving from Geneva or even a longer haul from the UK via the Channel Tunnel is completely doable. No mountain pass white-knuckle driving required.

January and early March hit the sweet spot. The village sits at just 650m, so snow reliability at the base can be iffy, you want mid-season when cover is deepest. February school holidays bring crowds and peak pricing across the Grand Massif. Bonus: the tree-lined runs hold up well in flat light, so even on overcast days the kids won't be skiing blind.

Morillon 1100 (Les Esserts) puts you at the foot of the pistes with a pedestrian-friendly layout and direct lift access, it's the practical choice for families who want to minimize boot-up-to-chairlift time. The main village at 650m has more charm, restaurants, and shops, but you'll rely on the gondola to reach the slopes. Hotels start at $55/night, and self-catering apartments are the local move for families keeping costs in check.

Book accommodation first since Morillon is tiny with limited lodging options, especially during French school holidays. Then reserve ski school spots at ESF Morillon 1-2 weeks ahead - classes start at age 3 but fill up quickly during peak periods. The beginner lift passes at €24.80 for adults can be purchased on arrival since they rarely sell out.

Morillon has several small rental shops including Morillon Sports and intersport, but selection for kids can be limited during busy periods. Many families rent in larger Samoens (10 minutes away) where shops like Sport 2000 have bigger inventories and competitive prices. If you're staying in Morillon village, the walk up to the gondola with gear isn't too bad.

Morillon has no confirmed childcare facilities for non-skiing toddlers, so you'd be watching them while others ski. The village is tiny with limited indoor activities for little ones. Consider staying in larger Samoens instead, which has more family amenities and indoor options like the aquatic center, while still accessing the same Grand Massif ski area.

Choose Samoens if you want more restaurants, shops, and activities for mixed-age families - it's a proper market town with weekly markets and an aquatic center. Pick Morillon if you prioritize quiet mornings and direct gondola access to the slopes with minimal walking. Both access the same 265km Grand Massif ski area, but Samoens offers more off-slope entertainment for kids and non-skiers.

Have a question we didn't cover? We'd love to add it to our guide.

Unser Fazit

Würden wir Morillon empfehlen?

Was es wirklich kostet

Morillon is the cheapest Grand Massif option. Limited accommodation inventory keeps prices low, and the village has minimal commercial infrastructure to extract extra spending.

The budget family in a self-catering apartment, packing lunches: a week for four can come in under EUR 2,000. Grand Massif passes run roughly EUR 260/adult and EUR 210/child for six days.

The comfortable family with a small rental and some mountain lunches: EUR 2,500-3,200.

The comparison: Morillon is about 20% less than Les Carroz and 30% less than Flaine on accommodation. Samoens is similar pricing with more village life. All four share the same EUR 260/adult Grand Massif pass. You are choosing how much you want to spend on everything except the skiing, which costs the same everywhere in the system.

Your smartest money move: Book early for limited apartment inventory and buy the Grand Massif pass. You get the same 265km as Flaine at the lowest accommodation cost in the system.

Worauf ihr achten müsst

The village is tiny. Two or three restaurants, one or two shops, and very little else. After skiing, your entertainment is your apartment and whatever you brought. Families with young children who are in bed by 7pm will not mind. Everyone else might.

Every morning starts with a gondola ride to reach the main Grand Massif terrain. During peak weeks, that is a 10-15 minute wait on top of the ride itself. Flaine residents are already skiing.

At roughly 700m village altitude, Morillon is the lowest Grand Massif village. Snow at the base is unreliable. The upper slopes via the gondola are fine, but you will not be skiing back to the village in most conditions. Flaine at 1,600m does not have this problem.

Facilities are minimal. No swimming pool, no ice rink, no cinema. Samoens has all of these 10 minutes away. Morillon is a sleeping village, literally and figuratively.

If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Les Carroz for more village infrastructure on the same Grand Massif pass.

Würden wir Morillon empfehlen?

Book Morillon if you want the quietest possible family holiday in the Grand Massif. A handful of chalets, a church, a direct gondola, and 265km of skiing waiting at the top. Your kids will have space to learn without crowds, and you will have silence after bedtime.

Book ESF lessons early for February. Then search the tourism office or Booking.com for the limited apartment inventory. Fly into Geneva (65 min).

If the village is too quiet (and it is very quiet), Samoens is 10 minutes away with more restaurants and shops but the same Grand Massif access. Les Carroz has more going on still. Flaine eliminates the gondola commute entirely. Morillon is for families who specifically want peace and simplicity.