Les Arcs, France: Family Ski Guide
Four villages, one mountain, kids' lessons steps from your chalet door.
Last updated: March 2026
Les Arcs
France
Les Arcs
Book Les Arcs if you want Paradiski's 425km with better English-language infrastructure than La Plagne and more modern village design than the older altitude stations. Arc 1950 is the family sweet spot: car-free, ski-in/ski-out, and built this century.Book Spirit or ESF ski school first for February. Then search lodging. Arc 1950 for convenience, Arc 1800 for the best balance of terrain access and price. The funicular from Bourg-Saint-Maurice means you can stay in town and commute up, saving on accommodation.Fly into Chambery, Lyon, or Geneva. The Eurostar runs direct to Bourg-Saint-Maurice on winter weekends, which makes Les Arcs one of the easiest French resorts to reach from London without a car.If you want Paradiski with more charm and lower prices, try Peisey-Vallandry or Champagny. If your family is mostly beginners, La Plagne's learner zones are superior. Les Arcs is the modern, well-rounded choice.
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Ist Les Arcs gut für Familien?
Les Arcs gives you 425km of Paradiski terrain from a modern, well-designed base with strong family infrastructure. Five altitude villages, good English-speaking ski schools, and a funicular from Bourg-Saint-Maurice that gets you on the mountain without a car. Best for families with kids 4 to 14. The catch: the higher villages (Arc 2000, Arc 1950) are purpose-built. If you want Paradiski with a real village, try Peisey-Vallandry or Champagny. If you want a gentler learning environment, La Plagne's beginner zones are better.
French Alps pricing (€76/day adult lift pass, packages from £1,650/person) puts Les Arcs firmly in the mid-to-premium bracket, and budget families will find meaningfully better value in other regions.
Biggest tradeoff
Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?
Beginner Machine
Les Arcs distributes its 35% beginner terrain across the mountain rather than penning novices into a single flat paddock at the base. This matters. Your child's first ski experience isn't a crowded conveyor belt next to the car park, it's actual mountain skiing, with views, at altitude, on gentle slopes designed for the purpose.
The clearest starting point is the Mille8 discovery zone at Arc 1800: a dedicated beginner ski area with its own magic carpet lifts, separated from the main piste network. Children learn their first snowplough here without an intermediate skier carving through their lesson at speed. From Mille8, the progression runs naturally, magic carpet to short green runs, green runs to the first drag lift, drag lift to the wide blues that connect Arc 1800 to Arc 1600. By day three or four, a child who started on the carpet is often riding a chairlift. That's a transformative experience for a six-year-old.
Arc 1600 offers the gentlest sustained cruising terrain in the resort, with long, wide blues that reward newly confident skiers with a sense of distance covered. It's also the quietest village, which means fewer people on those runs.
Three ski schools compete for your booking. ESF is the French national school, large, structured, and using the badge progression system (Ourson, Flocon, then the Étoile series) that French children know from age three. Visiting families unfamiliar with this system can find it opaque. New Generation and Evolution2 both offer English-speaking instructors as standard and tend toward smaller group sizes, though we don't have verified class-size data for any of the three. Parents on review sites report positive experiences with all three, but specifically recommend requesting English-language instruction at the time of booking rather than assuming it.
The pedestrianised village design pays its biggest dividend at the beginner stage. Ski school meeting points sit at piste level in every village, no shuttle bus, no car park crossing, no dragging crying children in ski boots across icy tarmac.
That alone is worth the premium for first-timer families.

Trail Map
Limited DataTrail map data not yet available
Check the official resort website or OpenSkiMap for trail information.
📊The Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Family Score | 7.1Good |
Best Age Range | 4–14 years |
Kid-Friendly Terrain | 35%Above average |
Childcare Available | Yes |
Ski School Min Age | — |
Kids Ski Free | — |
Score Breakdown
Value for Money
Convenience
Things to Do
Parent Experience
Childcare & Learning
Planning Your Trip
🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?
Your village choice matters more at Les Arcs than at almost any other French resort. Four main bases sit at 400-metre altitude intervals on the same mountainside, each with direct piste access and a pedestrianised centre, but their characters diverge sharply. Choose wrong and you'll spend the week wishing you were 10 minutes up the mountain.
Arc 1600: The Quiet Foundation
The lowest and quietest of the four, connected to Bourg-St-Maurice by the Arcs en Ciel funicular. Gentle slopes directly outside make it the strongest base for families with children under six who are just starting lessons. The architecture carries Charlotte Perriand's modernist fingerprint from the late 1960s, concrete and wood rather than chocolate-box chalets, striking if you appreciate mid-century design, stark if you don't. Accommodation here tends toward older apartment complexes, typically the most affordable of the four main villages. We don't have verified nightly rates, but expect a meaningful saving over Arc 1950 for equivalent floor space.
Arc 1800: The Practical Hub
The largest village, with the broadest range of accommodation, the most shops, and the Mille8 complex, the resort's dedicated family activity centre combining indoor aquatic centre, luge toboggan, and beginner ski zone. If you want everything within a two-minute walk and don't mind a busier village atmosphere, this is the logical base. Families with children of mixed ages and abilities will appreciate having the pool as a fallback on flat-light days. Accommodation ranges from basic self-catering studios to comfortable apart-hotels. Arc 1800 also has the most dining options of any village, though specific restaurant names and prices are not available in our current data.
Arc 1950: The Polished Village
Built in 2003 by Intrawest, the Canadian resort developer behind Whistler, Arc 1950 was designed from scratch as a car-free Alpine village centred on a single triangular pedestrian square where three streets converge. The stone-and-timber construction is so convincing that family reviewers consistently describe it as looking decades older than its twenty-year reality. A family reviewer visiting with children aged four and six at Christmas described it as "ideal for EVERYONE," specifically citing the ski-from-the-door setup and village atmosphere.
This is the most polished, most managed, most visually coherent base in Les Arcs, and the most expensive. A proper boulangerie anchors the central square, and on selected evenings during ski season, free mulled wine is served to adults in the square while families toboggan the adjacent slope as the sun sets. That scene alone sells return bookings.
The premium is real, though. Expect to pay 30-50% more for equivalent accommodation compared to Arc 1800, based on general pricing patterns, verify current rates directly.
Arc 2000: The High Station
The highest village at 2,000m, with the best snow reliability and the most direct access to challenging terrain above the treeline, including the Aiguille Rouge summit at 3,226m. Less suited to families with young beginners, the terrain immediately surrounding the village skews intermediate to advanced, and the village itself has fewer amenities. Families with confident teenage skiers and parents who want to push their own ability will find the best skiing here. Others will find it exposed and inconvenient.
Vallandry and Plan Peisey: The Budget Play
These outlying traditional villages sit within the Les Arcs lift system, with gondola access to the Vanoise Express cable car linking to La Plagne. Accommodation here is consistently cheaper than any of the four main Arc villages, and the atmosphere is quieter, more traditionally Alpine. Self-catering chalets and apartments dominate. The trade-off: fewer shops, fewer restaurants, and a slightly less seamless ski-in/ski-out experience than the purpose-built centres. For budget-conscious families who are happy to self-cater and don't need a pedestrian village at their door, this is where the value sits.
💬Was sagen andere Eltern?
Parents return to Les Arcs year after year, and the feedback paints a clear picture: this is a resort that understands what families need.
What families consistently love:
- The car-free villages, especially Arc 1950, get universal praise. As one parent put it: "perfect for a walk about without worrying about where little ones" are heading. No dodging traffic in ski boots with a tired four-year-old.
- Ski-from-the-door accommodation eliminates the morning gear-carrying ordeal that can derail a family ski day before it starts
- The evening atmosphere wins hearts: "some nights mulled wine is served for free, and families can toboggan on the slopes as the sun sets." That's the kind of low-key après-ski that actually works with kids.
- The terrain variety satisfies mixed-ability families. One parent with 25 years of Les Arcs experience called it "one of the best family ski holiday spots in the Alps" specifically because of "gentle and wide green and blue runs" combined with enough terrain to keep confident skiers engaged.
Common concerns:
- Arc 1950 looks Alpine-authentic but was built in 2003. Families seeking that centuries-old village atmosphere should know it's purpose-built, even if it's done well.
- The sheer size of the Paradiski area can feel overwhelming for first-timers. Parents recommend sticking to the Les Arcs side initially rather than attempting the full 425km on day one.
- Booking childcare and baby equipment loans well in advance is essential. Showing up and hoping for availability doesn't end well during peak weeks.
Tips from experienced families:
- Choose accommodation near lifts. "The fewer steps your little people have to take in ski boots, the better (for all concerned!)"
- Put snacks in kids' pockets for lesson breaks, and tape your name and phone number to their helmet
- Consider combining ski lessons with the Yéti Camp kids club for full-day coverage while you ski
- Arc 1800's Mille8 complex, with its toboggan run and aquatic center, gives non-ski days a purpose
The verdict: Les Arcs earns its reputation as a family-first resort. The infrastructure supports parents rather than just tolerating children. Best suited for families with kids aged 3 to 12 who want convenience without sacrificing quality skiing.
Families on the Slopes
(16 photos)Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.
Was kosten die Liftpässe?
Every tip here is specific to Les Arcs.
Buy the Les Arcs-area pass, not the full Paradiski pass, unless you plan to ski La Plagne multiple days. The difference adds up across a family of four. If you want a single day exploring La Plagne, a one-day Paradiski extension is more cost-efficient than buying the full-area pass for the week.
Stay in Vallandry or Plan Peisey. Accommodation in these traditional outlying villages runs consistently cheaper than Arc 1800 or 1950, with the same lift system access.
Self-cater. Apartments with kitchens are widely available in every village. A week of supermarket dinners versus restaurant meals saves hundreds of euros across a family. The boulangerie in Arc 1950 makes this less of a sacrifice than it sounds.
Ask about the Ski à la Carte programme, which lets you buy points-based lift access rather than a fixed multi-day pass, useful if you plan rest days and don't want to pay for days you won't ski.
Travel early December or late March for lower-season pricing on both accommodation and lift passes.
Planning Your Trip
✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Les Arcs?
The most distinctive route into Les Arcs is by train. The direct Eurostar Ski Train runs from London St Pancras to Bourg-St-Maurice on winter Saturdays, an overnight journey that deposits you at the base of the mountain without an airport, a hire car, or a transfer coach. From Bourg-St-Maurice station, the Arcs en Ciel funicular climbs directly to Arc 1600 in about seven minutes. Families arriving by TGV from Paris connect through the same station. For a resort of this size, the train-to-slopes transition is remarkably smooth.
Flying is the faster option from most UK and European departure points. Chambéry is the closest airport at 1.5 hours by transfer. Geneva and Lyon are both 2.5 hours. Private transfers and shared coaches operate from all three. Book transfers in advance during peak weeks, availability tightens quickly.
Driving is feasible via the A43 motorway. Snow chains are legally required to be carried and frequently needed. Parking in the resort is limited and typically underground, confirm arrangements with your accommodation provider. The car-free village design means you won't use the car once parked, which either justifies the parking fee or argues for not bringing one.
===SECTION: altitude-warning===
Altitude Note
Arc 1950 sits at 1,950m and Arc 2000 at 2,000m, high enough that young children, particularly those under five, may experience mild altitude symptoms: headaches, disrupted sleep, irritability beyond the usual holiday variety. Arc 1600 (1,600m) and Arc 1800 (1,800m) reduce exposure meaningfully. If your family is staying at one of the higher villages, plan a gentle acclimatisation day on arrival, Mille8's pool is a better first-day activity than a full morning on the slopes. Medical facilities are available in the resort, and Bourg-St-Maurice in the valley below has a hospital.

☕Was gibt's abseits der Piste?
Beyond the Slopes
The Mille8 complex at Arc 1800 is the headline act for non-ski days, and there will be non-ski days, whether from weather, fatigue, or a child who has decided they've had enough. The indoor aquatic centre offers pools and water slides suitable from toddler age upward. Outside, the luge toboggan run gives older children (and competitive parents) a gravity-fuelled thrill that requires no skiing ability. We don't have verified admission prices, but expect standard French resort activity pricing, check the Les Arcs website before your trip.
At Arc 1950, the evening tobogganing on the piste adjacent to the central square, with free mulled wine for adults, is the kind of experience that children remember for years. According to family reviewers, it runs on selected evenings during the ski season rather than nightly, so ask at your accommodation reception on arrival for the current schedule.
The resort also operates confirmed summer programmes including rafting, mountain biking, hiking, and climbing, a sign of year-round infrastructure rather than a winter-only operation. But in ski season, Mille8 and the Arc 1950 evening scene are the two standout non-ski experiences.
A toddler, a pool, and a hot chocolate afterwards. Sometimes that's the best day of the holiday.

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 Les Arcs empfehlen?
Was es wirklich kostet
Les Arcs is priced similarly to La Plagne: six-day Paradiski passes run EUR 380-410/adult, EUR 305-330/child. Kids under 5 ski free. The Paradiski-only pass is about 15% less if you skip La Plagne access.
The budget family in an Arc 1800 apartment, self-catering, group ESF lessons: plan EUR 3,000-3,500 for a week for four. Arc 1950 runs 20-30% more on lodging.
The comfortable family in Arc 1950 with daily ski school, mountain lunches, and full rental: EUR 4,500-5,500. Comparable to Meribel, less than Courchevel.
The train trick: Eurostar to Bourg-Saint-Maurice, apartment in town, funicular up each morning. Bourg lodging is 40-50% cheaper than the altitude villages, and the funicular takes 7 minutes. Families who do not need slopeside living save significantly.
For context: Champagny and Peisey-Vallandry access the same Paradiski terrain for 20-30% less on accommodation. You pay more at Les Arcs for newer buildings and better English-language services.
Your smartest money move: Take the Eurostar to Bourg-Saint-Maurice, rent an apartment in town, and ride the 7-minute funicular up each morning. Bourg lodging is 40-50% cheaper than the altitude villages.
Worauf ihr achten müsst
The village you choose matters more here than at most resorts. Arc 1600 and 1800 are 1960s/70s purpose-built with limited charm. Arc 1950 (built 2003) is the family favourite but costs more. Arc 2000 is high and exposed. Do your research before booking.
Paradiski is vast, and the link to La Plagne via the Vanoise Express adds travel time. With young children, stay on the Les Arcs side and save the crossing for a special day when everyone has energy.
The Aiguille Rouge top station at 3,226m offers dramatic high-altitude skiing, but small children should not be up there in bad weather. Stick to the mid-mountain in poor visibility.
Like all big French resorts, the ESF lunch break runs noon to 2pm. Your kids will be handed back to you hungry. Plan ahead with a mountain restaurant booking or packed snacks.
If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Peisey-Vallandry for the same Paradiski terrain at 20-30% less on accommodation.
Würden wir Les Arcs empfehlen?
Book Les Arcs if you want Paradiski's 425km with better English-language infrastructure than La Plagne and more modern village design than the older altitude stations. Arc 1950 is the family sweet spot: car-free, ski-in/ski-out, and built this century.
Book Spirit or ESF ski school first for February. Then search lodging. Arc 1950 for convenience, Arc 1800 for the best balance of terrain access and price. The funicular from Bourg-Saint-Maurice means you can stay in town and commute up, saving on accommodation.
Fly into Chambery, Lyon, or Geneva. The Eurostar runs direct to Bourg-Saint-Maurice on winter weekends, which makes Les Arcs one of the easiest French resorts to reach from London without a car.
If you want Paradiski with more charm and lower prices, try Peisey-Vallandry or Champagny. If your family is mostly beginners, La Plagne's learner zones are superior. Les Arcs is the modern, well-rounded choice.
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