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Haute-Savoie, France

Combloux, France: Family Ski Guide

Megève's mountain, half the price, Mont Blanc from every run.

Family Score: 7.8/10
Ages 3-14

Last updated: March 2026

Combloux

7.8/10

France

Combloux

Book Combloux if you want Mont Blanc views without Megeve prices and your kids are still learning. Fifty-five percent beginner terrain, garderie from age 3, and lodging at a fraction of what the same slopes cost from the Megeve side.Book accommodation through the Combloux Tourist Office directly, because lodging through them unlocks up to 40% off six-day lift passes. Then reserve ESF Combloux at esf-combloux.com at least four days before arrival. February half-term fills fastest.Fly into Geneva, 75 minutes by car. If you want more terrain and higher altitude in the same Evasion Mont Blanc domain, Saint-Gervais is the better base. If you want a prettier village with similar beginner focus, try Le Grand Bornand. If money is no object, Megeve is 10 minutes away with better restaurants and the same lifts.

Beste Zeit: January
Alter 3–14
Your kids are beginners or early intermediates who'd feel overwhelmed in a massive resort
Your family needs reliable snow, because Combloux sits at just 1,100m and warm spells can leave lower slopes bare
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Dieser Reiseguide ist derzeit auf Englisch verfügbar. Wir arbeiten an der deutschen Version!

Ist Combloux gut für Familien?

Kurz & knapp

Combloux is Megeve's quieter, cheaper neighbor, and your family gets the same Le Jaillet ski area plus Mont Blanc views from every run. With 55% beginner terrain and a purpose-built learner zone, it is ideal for kids 3 to 10 still finding their ski legs. Adult day passes run EUR 51.50 locally, EUR 63.50 for Evasion Mont Blanc. The catch: at 1,100m village altitude, warm spells strip the lower slopes. Book mid-season. If you want the same views with higher altitude, try Saint-Gervais.

Your family needs reliable snow, because Combloux sits at just 1,100m and warm spells can leave lower slopes bare

Biggest tradeoff

⛷️

Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?

55% Very beginner-friendly

Your toddler goes from wobbly pizza wedges to confidently skiing down a real mountain run, all while Mont Blanc fills their entire field of vision. Combloux transforms nervous beginners into ski-obsessed kids faster than almost anywhere in the French Alps, thanks to 55% beginner and novice terrain that feels like proper mountain skiing without the intimidation factor.

Wide, gentle pistes roll through pine forests with the Mont Blanc massif as your backdrop. Your kids get those epic postcard views while you actually get to relax and watch them progress.

The Beginner Zone

Your family's ski journey starts in the Bouchet area, where gentle gradients and wind protection create the perfect learning environment. Nobody's bombing past your wobbly four-year-old here because it's properly separated from the main runs.

The dedicated beginner lift pass costs just €17.50 per day for access to the Brons, Garettes, and Mowgli drag lifts. Compare that to €51.50 for a full Portes du Mont-Blanc pass or €63.50 for Evasion Mont-Blanc. Your family can ski the learner zone for a week for less than one day at Trois Vallées.

Once your kids graduate from the nursery slopes, the Gentiane piste becomes their confidence builder. It's a long, smooth green run that feels like a real mountain descent without ever getting scary steep. Your early intermediates will ski it five times in a row and announce they're "basically pros now." The whole Combloux sector offers 100km of pistes as part of Les Portes du Mont-Blanc, linking into Megève's Jaillet sector and La Giettaz when you're ready to explore.

Ski School

Your three-year-old will think ski school is just elaborate playground time, which is exactly the point. ESF Combloux runs 110 instructors who specialize in small children, starting with Club Piou-Piou in the Jardin des Neiges at La Cry.

The Gardi-Ski formula is pure genius for parents. Ages 3-5 get 90 minutes of ski instruction plus supervised childcare at Garderie Les Loupiots right at the slopes. Half-day sessions start at €60, full six-day packages run €285-€395. Your toddler learns to ski, then transitions to snow games and warm lunch while you actually ski.

For ages 5-10, the Skieurs formula combines three hours of group lessons with daycare for the rest of the day (€376 for six days including meals). Group lessons typically run 9:30am-12:30pm or 2pm-5pm, Sunday through Friday, ending with medal ceremonies your child will treasure forever.

Private lessons start at €51 per hour for one or two people, €65 for three or four. Instructors speak English and Italian, so language barriers aren't an issue. Book the 8:30am slot for fresh corduroy and an instructor who's not yet hoarse from teaching.

The Bigger Picture

Your family gets reliable snow from mid-January through mid-March at this 1,100m base elevation (lifts to 1,930m). Warm spells can affect lower slopes early and late season, but when conditions are good, this place delivers way beyond expectations.

The Beauregard gondola opens up panoramic terrain where intermediate cruisers can link long blue runs through Jaillet and Giettaz sectors. Strong skiers should upgrade to the Evasion Mont-Blanc pass for 445km across Megève, Saint-Gervais, and Les Contamines-Montjoie. Without it, confident intermediates will cover the local area in 2-3 days.

There's a small freestyle zone via Tête du Torraz and Grande Rare chairlifts, but no dedicated kids' terrain park. This mountain optimizes for learning and cruising, not sending it.

Lunch on the Mountain

Your family's perfect ski day includes lunch at Les Terrasses du Cuchet, where menus start at €18 and you're sitting on a south-facing terrace with Mont Blanc views while your kids demolish croque-monsieurs.

Le Chalet d'Emilie offers traditional Savoyard cooking in Instagram-worthy rustic interiors. Chez Albert in village works for post-ski late lunch. None will bankrupt you like Courchevel would.

Rental Gear

Several rental shops operate in village and near La Cry lift base. Booking through accommodation or the tourist office unlocks bundled discounts, with up to 40% off lift passes when booking lodging through Combloux tourism office.

Rental pricing runs well below neighboring Megève for identical equipment. Reserve online before arrival, especially during February school holidays when inventory gets thin.

What will your kid remember? Standing at the top of their first real blue run, looking across at the biggest mountain they've ever seen, hearing their instructor count "un, deux, trois" before pushing off. That moment, with fresh snow crunching and Mont Blanc filling the sky, costs less per day than family lunch in central London.

User photo of Combloux

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
7.8Very good
Best Age Range
3–14 years
Kid-Friendly Terrain
55%Very beginner-friendly
Childcare Available
Yes
Ski School Min Age
3 years
Kids Ski Free
Under 5
Kids Terrain Park
No

Score Breakdown

Value for Money

9.0

Convenience

7.5

Things to Do

6.5

Parent Experience

7.0

Childcare & Learning

7.5

Planning Your Trip

💬Was sagen andere Eltern?

"Both my boys had lessons at multiple local resorts and both claim that it is their favourite ski station," writes one parent on the Mont Blanc Family Fun blog. That quote captures what makes Combloux special. Parents tend to fall into two camps: those who discovered it by accident and now guard the secret jealously, and those who booked it as a budget alternative to Megève and ended up preferring it.

The consistent praise centers on the village's lack of pretension. Your kids can run between the bakery and the ski bus without anyone feeling like they're navigating a luxury brand's marketing campaign. That 55% beginner terrain means most of the mountain actually works for the family members who need it most.

The ESF Combloux draws near-universal praise from returning families, particularly the Gardi-ski program that bundles ski lessons with childcare for ages 3 to 5. Parents love that the handoff between Les Loupiots daycare and the ski school is managed for them. No sprinting across the resort in ski boots trying to shuttle a three-year-old between two buildings. The daycare sits right at the foot of the slopes at La Cry, which parents describe as a genuine logistical win.

The consistent complaint? Snow reliability at 1,100m elevation. Parents who've visited during warm February spells report lower slopes turning to slush by early afternoon. "Gorgeous views, questionable coverage" comes up repeatedly. Those 360° Mont Blanc panoramas are spectacular, but the sunny exposure that creates postcard views also melts snow faster than higher-altitude neighbors. Mid-January through early March delivers the most consistent conditions.

English-speaking families flag the language barrier more here than at bigger French resorts. Combloux is a genuine French village, not a purpose-built international ski station. Signage is mostly in French, many local shops and restaurants don't speak English, and ESF instructors vary in their English fluency. Parents describe it as "manageable but occasionally frustrating." This authenticity keeps Combloux affordable (resorts with four-language everything charge €80 for day passes).

Experienced families share crucial tips:

  • Book Gardi-ski packages by Wednesday before arrival (before 17:30) because they fill up during holidays with zero last-minute availability
  • Use the free ski bus between village and La Cry (runs every 15 minutes, saves parking hassles)
  • Consider the Evasion Mont-Blanc upgrade for confident intermediates who'll exhaust 100km local terrain quickly

Parents call that 445km Evasion Mont-Blanc network marketing mostly irrelevant for young families. You're not dragging a six-year-old across four linked resorts. The local terrain is the product, and it's excellent for beginners and early intermediates.

Families on the Slopes

(8 photos)

Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.


🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?

If I could only book one place for your family, it would be Résidence Les Roches du Mont Blanc because your mornings will actually start with coffee instead of chaos. This 4-star residence gives you apartment independence with hotel-grade amenities, which means your kids get pool time while you get that Mont Blanc view you came for.

Here's why it works: heated ski lockers (no wrestling frozen boots at 8am), a playroom that buys you 30 minutes of quiet after skiing, and apartments from studios to multi-bedroom units. Indoor and outdoor pools, sauna, jacuzzi, steam room. Your teenagers will Instagram the panorama while your little ones splash safely nearby.

The secret most families miss? Combloux is an apartment town, and those who figure that out early save the most money. Self-catered residences and chalets with full kitchens give you more space per euro and the flexibility that makes small children feel less like tiny dictators.

Budget-smart families love Résidence Les Chalets des Pistes (managed by Goélia) for apartments sleeping up to seven, close to slopes with pool and parking. They'll rent baby gear (cot, highchair, bath) for €15 per stay. All-inclusive packages bundling accommodation and lift passes run from €432 per person per week.

If someone else making beds sounds like vacation to you, Aux Ducs de Savoie earns its 9.4 Booking.com rating from 342 reviews. Seasonal outdoor pool, sauna, hot tub, and private balconies where your kids will eat breakfast staring at Mont Blanc instead of screens. Nightly rates range from €150 to €300.

For true slopeside convenience, Chalet Alpen Valley, Mont-Blanc sits right at the ski area start with hammam, sauna, and a small cinema. Their on-site restaurant Le Cellier means no dragging tired children through the village after long ski days.

Money-saving magic: book through Combloux tourist office for up to 40% off six-day lift passes and 20% off ESF Combloux lessons. On a family of four buying Evasion Mont Blanc passes at €63.50 per adult per day, those discounts pay for your kids' ski school.


🎟️

Was kosten die Liftpässe?

Your family budget will breathe easier here than at most French Alps resorts, and the two-tier pass system means you can tailor spending to exactly where your kids are in their ski journey.

The Portes du Mont-Blanc pass covers Combloux, Megève le Jaillet, and La Giettaz (100km of slopes) for €51.50 per adult day, €44 for children (ages 5 to 14), and €46.50 for seniors. That's 35% less than a Trois Vallées day pass, which matters when you're multiplying by four or five family members. Six-day adult passes drop to €257.50 (€43/day), with kids at €220. Under 5s ride free, naturally.

The full Evasion Mont-Blanc network adds Megève proper, Saint-Gervais, and Les Contamines for €63.50/day (adults), €54 for children, €57 for seniors. Six-day passes run €318 for adults and €270.50 for kids. Unless your crew has confident intermediates ready to explore beyond the local slopes, stick with the smaller pass and save that upgrade money for après-ski hot chocolate.

The savings get serious if you plan ahead. Buy an Evasion Mont-Blanc 6-day pass 10 days before arrival and get a free bonus day (six becomes seven). Book lodging through the Combloux tourist office and your 6-day passes can drop up to 40%, which most families completely miss.

  • Family discount: 10% off when you buy 4 or more passes of the same duration simultaneously, with at least 2 children. Stacks with other offers
  • Beginner pass: €17.50/day for learning lifts only. Perfect for first-timers who don't need the full mountain
  • No Epic or Ikon coverage here. Combloux doesn't play in those ecosystems

That €17.50 beginner pass changes everything for families with ski school kids. While your little ones are mastering snowplow turns on the Brons and Garettes drag lifts, there's zero reason to buy full passes. Your ESF Combloux instructor will signal when they're ready to upgrade. That patience saves €30 per child per day until they graduate from the learning area.


Planning Your Trip

✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Combloux?

Good news for parents who dread mountain transfers: Combloux is refreshingly straightforward to reach with kids in tow. Your little ones won't spend hours on winding roads asking "are we there yet?" because this place sits just 70 minutes from Geneva Airport (GVA).

The drive is almost entirely on autoroute until the final 15 minutes of gentle mountain road. No white-knuckle switchbacks, no chains required on the main approach. You'll cruise the A40 autoroute blanche through the Arve valley, exit at Sallanches, and wind through a few quiet villages before Mont Blanc appears in your windshield like a screensaver that's actually real.

For families flying in from the UK or elsewhere in Europe, Geneva is the obvious gateway. Lyon Saint-Exupéry Airport (LYS) is your backup at 2 hours, though it sometimes wins on flight pricing. Chambéry Airport (CMF) is 90 minutes but has limited winter charter service.

Honestly, renting a car makes the most sense with kids. You'll want the flexibility for grocery runs and spontaneous day trips to Megève (10 minutes) or Chamonix (30 minutes). Winter tires are legally required in the French Alps from November through March, so confirm M+S or snowflake markings when you pick up your rental. Most Geneva agencies sort this automatically, but check the paperwork before you leave the lot.

If driving sounds like too much hassle, Sallanches has a TGV station just 15 minutes from Combloux, with direct weekend service from Paris during ski season. From the station, taxis or a pre-booked transfer from Alpybus or Mountain Drop-offs will finish the job for under €40. From Geneva, Easybus and Alpybus both run shared shuttle services to the Megève/Combloux area.

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PRO TIP
If you book accommodation through the Combloux tourist office, you can unlock up to 40% off lift passes. That savings alone can cover your transfer costs, so it's worth a quick email before you book elsewhere.

One thing that trips up English-speaking families: road signage in this part of Haute-Savoie is entirely in French, and GPS sometimes routes you through Megève's narrow centre instead of the more direct Sallanches approach. Plug in "La Cry, Combloux" as your destination to land right at the base of the slopes.

User photo of Combloux

Was gibt's abseits der Piste?

By 6pm, your exhausted kids will be rubbing their eyes and asking for mac and cheese, but the memories they'll carry from these quiet Combloux evenings will surprise you. This is a real Haute-Savoie village, not a purpose-built resort, so evenings run more toward warm lights in chalet windows than thumping bass. Your kids will be asleep by 9pm. You won't be far behind, and honestly, that's the point.

Where to Eat

Getting hangry kids fed without drama is actually manageable here. The village punches above its weight for a resort this size.

Les Terrasses du Cuchet serves proper Savoyard cooking with menus starting at €18. Think tartiflette, raclette, and fondue with the kind of melted-cheese aroma that pulls you in from the street. Chez Albert is a reliable slopeside spot for a family lunch without fuss.

Chalet Gipsy leans into the après vibe with drinks and comfort food as the lifts wind down. For something more polished, Le Cellier du Chalet Alpen Valley inside the four-star hotel does local Savoyard cuisine with a bit more ceremony.

Le Chalet d'Emilie rounds out the options with mountain-restaurant warmth. None of these require a second mortgage, which is more than you can say for dinner 10 minutes down the road in Megève.

Things to Do Off the Slopes

Your kids will talk about the Luge 4S (four-season toboggan run) at school on Monday. It's free with any six-day pass for the Portes du Mont-Blanc or Evasion Mont-Blanc area, making it the best freebie in the region.

When you need to tire them out further, the Combloux pump track hits perfectly for older kids who still have energy after ski boots come off. Raquettes (snowshoeing) trails leave from the village and wind through forests with Mont Blanc views that stop you mid-sentence.

The 360° panoramas from the Beauregard gondola are accessible with a pedestrian pass, perfect for non-skiing grandparents or a parent taking a rest day. Combloux's baroque church is worth a 15-minute detour if you need a quiet moment (or the kids are studying European history).

Village Walkability and Self-Catering

Managing small children on foot is actually doable here since Combloux's village center is compact. A free navette (shuttle bus) runs between the tourist office and the La Cry ski area every 15 minutes, solving the one logistical gap if your accommodation sits between the two.

Download Google Translate's offline French pack before you arrive (most signage is French only). Takes 30 seconds and saves real friction at the boulangerie.

For self-catering, the village has small épiceries with basics, bread, cheese, charcuterie, and wine. Stop at a larger supermarket in Sallanches (15 minutes by car) on your way in and stock up for the week. You'll save meaningfully on breakfast supplies versus resort-village markups.

If you want livelier evenings, Megève is 10 minutes by car with proper restaurants and bars. But Combloux's quiet is a feature, not a bug. You'll sit on your chalet balcony watching the alpenglow fade off Mont Blanc, glass of Savoie wine in hand, kids finally silent. That's worth more than any après bar.

User photo of Combloux

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 Combloux for Beginner Skiers?

# The Beginner Machine Combloux doesn't just tolerate beginners. With 55% of its terrain rated beginner-friendly, the resort is essentially built around them. The learning zone is concentrated at La Cry, a dedicated snow front area at the base where everything a first-timer needs lives within a few hundred meters: ski school, rental shops, nursery, and gentle slopes. You don't have to navigate a gondola or find your way across a massive base area. You show up, you're there. Your nervous four-year-old's first day starts at the Club Piou Piou, run by ESF Combloux (the French Ski School, staffed by 110 instructors). Kids as young as 3 join the Gardi-ski program, which cleverly splits the morning into 1.5 hours of actual skiing and 1.5 hours of supervised childcare at Garderie Les Loupiots, right at the foot of the slopes. This means your tiny human isn't expected to sustain focus for three straight hours in the cold. They ski, they play, everyone stays happy. Full-day Gardi-ski options run Sunday to Friday during school holidays, so you genuinely get your day back. For children aged 5 to 12, group lessons progress through the classic ESF medal system, from Ourson through to Gold Star. Classes run Sunday to Friday, either 9:30am to 12:30pm or 2pm to 5pm, meeting above the La Cry ESF chalet. During February holidays, ESF Combloux also offers mini lessons capped at just five kids, which is worth the premium if your child needs more individual attention. English is spoken by instructors, along with Italian, though the default language is French. If language is a concern, book a private lesson and specify English when reserving. Now, the nervous 40-year-old. Adult group lessons follow the same Sunday to Friday schedule, and the brilliant part is the beginner-specific lift pass. At just €17.50 per day, it gives access to the Brons, Garettes, and Mowgli drag lifts only. These are mellow, short surface lifts right at La Cry. No reason to buy a full pass until your instructor says you're ready to move up. You'll spend your first two to three days here, learning to snowplow and link turns on wide, gentle slopes with Mont Blanc staring right at you. It's a far cry from the intimidating lift queues of bigger resorts. The progression path is clear: beginners start on those three drag lifts at La Cry, graduate to the Bouchet area (gentle, wide green and blue runs accessed by the Beauregard gondola), and eventually link into the broader Portes du Mont-Blanc network. For most adults, expect three to four days before your instructor greenlights blue runs. For kids in the ESF system, a full week typically moves them from Ourson to their first star, at which point they're confidently handling green runs and the easier blues. The bottleneck? During French school holidays (particularly February), La Cry gets crowded. The beginner lifts are short and slow, which means queues build even though the terrain itself never feels packed. Booking lessons well in advance is essential. The ESF requires reservations at least four days ahead for combined daycare and ski packages. Outside holiday weeks, the beginner area is wonderfully quiet, and instructor-to-student ratios shrink noticeably. Equipment rental is available from several shops in the village and at La Cry. Quality is standard French resort fare: perfectly functional mid-range gear that gets the job done. For small children, most rental shops stock short, soft-flex skis and rear-entry boots that are easier for little fingers. Don't expect boutique-level fitting, but don't worry about it either. The honest timeline from pizza wedge to parallel turns? Most motivated adults get there in five to six days of lessons. Kids under 8 tend to figure it out faster, because they don't overthink it.
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Which Family Are You?

Which Families Is Combloux Best For?

The First-Timer Family

Great match

This is your resort. With 55% of the terrain rated beginner or novice, Combloux is basically one giant confidence builder with a Mont Blanc backdrop. The gentle slopes around the Bouchet area are wide and forgiving, and <strong>ESF Combloux</strong> takes kids from age 3 in their Piou-Piou club. You won't spend half your holiday worrying someone's on a run they shouldn't be.

Start everyone on the dedicated beginner pass at just €17.50 per day, which gives access to the learning-area lifts without paying for a full mountain you're not ready for. Graduate to the Portes du Mont-Blanc pass only when you need it.

✈️ Getting There

How Do You Get to Combloux?

## Getting There Geneva is your airport. It's roughly 75 minutes to Combloux in good conditions, but add 20 to 30 minutes on a Saturday changeover day when the A40 autoroute backs up near Cluses. If you're pricing flights and Geneva looks expensive, check Lyon (about 2.5 hours drive) or even the Eurostar to Paris followed by TGV to Sallanches station, which sits just 15 minutes from the resort. Weekend TGV services run direct from Paris in winter, and a family of four with rail can sometimes undercut flights once you factor in luggage fees. For transfers from Geneva, Mountain Drop-offs and Bens Bus run shared services to the Megève/Combloux area at reasonable per-seat prices. If you want private and need car seats, book with Alpski or Skiidy Gonzales, both of which stock boosters and infant seats when you request them at booking. Do not assume any transfer company will just have a spare car seat lying around. Specify ages and weights of every child in the booking notes, then confirm again 48 hours before travel. Families who wing this end up holding a toddler on their lap in a van on icy mountain roads, which is both illegal in France and terrifying. The scenic route option: if you're renting a car, skip the autoroute after Cluses and take the D909 through Sallanches toward Combloux. It adds maybe ten minutes but the first time Mont Blanc appears through your windshield, filling the entire frame, your kids will actually look up from their screens. This is the approach that made Combloux famous, and it's genuinely one of the best mountain arrivals in the Alps. At Geneva airport, buy snacks, water, and a cheap inflatable neck pillow for whoever's most likely to melt down during the transfer. Do not buy ski gloves, goggles, or sunscreen here. You'll pay airport markup for mediocre gear. Combloux has Sport 2000 and local rental shops near the La Cry base area where you can get properly fitted kids' equipment, and many accommodations partner with delivery rental services like Skiset that drop boots and skis to your door. Renting at the resort also means you can swap gear mid-week if your six-year-old suddenly decides the boots "feel weird" on day three. The one thing every family forgets: the lift pass photos. Combloux uses hands-free pass cards, but you'll need passport-style photos for ski school registration at ESF Combloux. Bring them from home or snap them on your phone beforehand. Sorting this out at a photo booth while your kids are melting is nobody's idea of fun. Your first-hour playbook should look like this: check into your accommodation first, change into base layers, then walk (don't drive) to the rental shop. Get boots fitted while the kids are still cooperative and fed. Grab lift passes from the ticket office at La Cry, which is connected by a free shuttle bus from the village center. If you've arrived by midday, you can realistically have everyone on snow by 2pm. With 55% of Combloux's terrain rated beginner-friendly, even a short afternoon session lets new skiers find their feet on gentle, confidence-building slopes before the real week begins. Feed everyone early. The village has a handful of restaurants, but a family arriving hangry after travel doesn't need a sit-down Savoyard dinner. They need pasta, bread, and horizontal surfaces. Unpack tomorrow.

Common Questions

Everything families ask about this resort

It's one of the best beginner setups in the French Alps. 55% of the terrain is rated novice or easy, the Bouchet area has wide, gentle slopes perfect for first-timers, and there's a dedicated beginner lift pass for just €17.50/day so you're not paying full price while your kids are still on the bunny slopes. Think of it as Megève's mellower, more affordable neighbor with Mont Blanc views thrown in for free.

ESF Combloux takes kids from age 3 in the Piou-Piou club, and the "Gardi-ski" program (ages 3-5) is the real winner, it combines a 1.5-hour ski lesson with supervised daycare starting at €60 per session or €285 for a 6-day package. The "Les Loupiots" nursery at the base of the slopes handles ages 3-10 at €38 per half-day or €68 for a full day with meals. It's not a crèche for babies, though, 3 years old is the minimum across the board.

An adult day pass on the Portes du Mont-Blanc (100km local area) runs €51.50, with kids ages 5-14 at €44. For the full Evasion Mont-Blanc domain (445km connecting to Megève and Saint-Gervais), it's €63.50 adult and €54 child. The family discount is 10% off when you buy 4+ passes of the same duration with at least 2 kids, and if you book accommodation through the tourist office, you can score up to 40% off 6-day passes.

Fly into Geneva (1 hour drive) or take the TGV to Sallanches station, which is just 15 minutes away and gets direct weekend trains from Paris in winter. Once you're in the village, there's a free ski bus running every 15 minutes between the town center and the La Cry ski area. Combloux also has ski-in/ski-out lodging options if you want to skip transit entirely.

Mid-January through mid-March is the sweet spot. The resort sits at 1,100m with skiing up to 1,930m, so it's not bulletproof against warm spells, avoid early December and late March when lower slopes can get patchy. The season officially runs December 20 to March 22, and January weeks outside French school holidays give you the shortest lift lines and the best lodging deals.

For families with beginners and early intermediates, the Portes du Mont-Blanc pass (100km, €257.50 for a 6-day adult) is plenty, you'll have 61 runs across Combloux, Jaillet, and La Giettaz without spending more. Upgrade to Evasion Mont-Blanc (€318 for 6 days) only if you have confident intermediates who'll want to explore Megève and Saint-Gervais. Pro tip: buy the Evasion pass 10+ days in advance and you get one day free.

Book ESF lessons online at least 5-7 days ahead, especially during French school holidays when Parisian families flood the area. Combloux's ski school is smaller than Megève's, so popular morning time slots with English-speaking instructors fill up fast. You can usually add days once you're there though.

The local area works for 3-4 days max with beginners, then upgrade to the Evasion Mont Blanc pass to access Megève, Saint-Gervais, and Saint-Nicolas. That opens up 445km total and keeps confident kids challenged while maintaining Combloux as your quiet home base for meals and bedtime.

Combloux sits at just 1,100m village altitude, so early and late season can be sketchy - stick to mid-January through mid-March for reliable coverage. The trade-off for amazing Mont Blanc views is that warm spells can leave lower runs bare or slushy by afternoon. Check snow reports before booking.

La Ferme de la Côte serves kid-friendly Savoyard food and welcomes families before 8pm, while Restaurant L'Etoile has pizza and pasta that even picky eaters will tackle. Most families cook at their chalet though - grab supplies at the village Sherpa market or drive 15 minutes to Sallanches for better grocery selection and prices.

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

Unser Fazit

Würden wir Combloux empfehlen?

Was es wirklich kostet

Combloux is affordable by French Alps standards, and the gap with neighboring Megeve is dramatic. Adult day passes on the local Portes du Mont-Blanc area run EUR 51.50, with kids at EUR 44. You are paying roughly 30% less than a day in the Three Valleys.

The budget family buys 6-day Portes du Mont-Blanc passes (EUR 257.50/adult, EUR 220/child), claims the 10% family discount, and starts beginners on the EUR 17.50/day learner pass covering the gentle lower lifts. Family lift costs for the week come under EUR 860.

The comfortable family takes a mid-range hotel at EUR 100-200/night, upgrades to Evasion Mont Blanc passes to unlock Megeve, and drops kids at Les Loupiots daycare for EUR 340/week or the Gardiski formula combining lessons and childcare from EUR 285 for six days. You spend more than the budget route, but a full week of childcare here costs less than a single night at a Megeve hotel.

For context: Saint-Gervais costs about the same with better altitude. Megeve costs 50-80% more for the same lifts.

Your smartest money move: Start beginners on the EUR 17.50/day learner pass covering the lower lifts, claim the 10% family discount on 6-day passes, and skip the Evasion Mont Blanc upgrade unless you actually plan to ski into Megeve.

Worauf ihr achten müsst

At 1,100m, Combloux is the lowest village in this guide's Mont Blanc section, and warm spells can strip the lower slopes bare. This is the single biggest risk. Come mid-January to mid-March and stick to the higher Beauregard sector on soft days. Saint-Gervais, starting at 1,400m on the slopes, holds snow a bit longer.

Confident intermediates will exhaust the local 100km in two days. The Evasion Mont Blanc upgrade (EUR 63.50/day) unlocks 445km across Megeve and Saint-Gervais, but that is a meaningful bump over the EUR 51.50 local pass.

Combloux is a French village that operates in French. Signage, menus, lift staff. ESF instructors speak English, but do not expect the bilingual handholding of Verbier or Courchevel.

The village goes quiet after dinner. Megeve is 10 minutes by car if you need evening life. But with tired kids and Mont Blanc glowing outside your window, quiet starts to feel like the point.

If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Saint-Gervais for better altitude and more direct Evasion Mont Blanc access at similar prices.

Würden wir Combloux empfehlen?

Book Combloux if you want Mont Blanc views without Megeve prices and your kids are still learning. Fifty-five percent beginner terrain, garderie from age 3, and lodging at a fraction of what the same slopes cost from the Megeve side.

Book accommodation through the Combloux Tourist Office directly, because lodging through them unlocks up to 40% off six-day lift passes. Then reserve ESF Combloux at esf-combloux.com at least four days before arrival. February half-term fills fastest.

Fly into Geneva, 75 minutes by car. If you want more terrain and higher altitude in the same Evasion Mont Blanc domain, Saint-Gervais is the better base. If you want a prettier village with similar beginner focus, try Le Grand Bornand. If money is no object, Megeve is 10 minutes away with better restaurants and the same lifts.