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Savoie, France

Val Thorens, France: Family Ski Guide

2,300m altitude, 600km terrain, too windy for toddlers.

Family Score: 7.6/10
Ages 3-16
$$ Mid-range

Last updated: April 2026

Val Thorens - official image
7.6/10 Family Score
7.6/10

France

Val Thorens

Book Val Thorens if snow reliability is what keeps you up at night. At 2,300m, it gets snow first, loses it last, and accesses 600km of Three Valleys from the top of the system. The compact, largely car-free village centre makes the morning routine simple, and the family infrastructure has improved markedly in recent years.Book ESF or Prosneige ski school first for February. Then search Pierre and Vacances, the Val Thorens tourism office, or Booking.com. Buy Three Valleys passes on les3vallees.com for Family Flex pricing.Fly into Chambery (2h), Lyon (2.5h), or Geneva (2.5h). If you want the Three Valleys with better village character, Meribel or Saint-Martin-de-Belleville are lower but prettier. Les Menuires, 10 minutes below, offers cheaper Three Valleys slopeside skiing. If you want high altitude and snow reliability outside the Three Valleys, Tignes (2,100m with glacier) is the alternative. Val Thorens is for families who want the snow equation solved.

$$ Mid-range
Beste Zeit: January
Alter 3–16
Your kids are 6+ and ready to graduate from bunny hills to serious exploration
You have children under 5 (altitude sickness is real at 2,300m)
🌐

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

Ist Val Thorens gut für Familien?

Kurz & knapp

Val Thorens is the highest resort in Europe (2,300m) and the snowiest entry into the Three Valleys' 600km. Compact car-free centre, good family facilities, and guaranteed snow November to May. Best for kids 3 to 14 who want Three Valleys with the best snow. The catch: purpose-built, altitude affects some children, and exposed to wind. For Three Valleys with more charm, try Saint-Martin-de-Belleville. For high altitude outside Three Valleys, try Tignes.

$3,120$4,160

/week for family of 4

You have children under 5 (altitude sickness is real at 2,300m)

Biggest tradeoff

⛷️

Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?

65% Very beginner-friendly

Your kid will ski the highest resort in Europe and come home telling everyone they skied at 3,230 meters. Val Thorens sits at 2,300m with skiing up to 3,230m, and the altitude guarantees snow from November through May. That reliability is worth more than any other amenity for families who have had a ski trip ruined by warm weather.

The resort is part of the Trois Vallees (600 km of pistes), the largest linked ski area in the world. But you do not need to leave Val Thorens. The local 150 km of terrain includes wide, well-groomed runs above the treeline that give beginners excellent visibility and consistent snow quality.

Beginner Zones

The Roc beginner area sits right at the resort center with free magic carpets and gentle slopes. The Plein Sud sector has wide blue runs on south-facing slopes where your child skis in sunshine. The above-treeline terrain means open, wide runs with clear sightlines. Beginners can see exactly where they are going.

Ski School

Multiple schools operate in Val Thorens. The ESF is the largest. Prosneige and other international schools offer smaller groups and English instruction as standard.

  • Group lessons (3+): EUR 35-55 per half day depending on school and season
  • Private lessons: EUR 55-75 per hour
  • Children's village: The ESF runs a dedicated children's zone with combined indoor/outdoor activities

On-Mountain Dining

Mountain restaurants range from self-service cafeterias to proper sit-down dining. La Maison at the top of the Plein Sud sector has a sun terrace with views across the Trois Vallees. Expect EUR 12-20 for adult mains, EUR 8-12 for kids' menus. The on-mountain dining in Val Thorens is a step above cafeteria standard.

User photo of Val Thorens - skiing

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
7.6Very good
Best Age Range
3–16 years
Kid-Friendly Terrain
65%Very beginner-friendly
Childcare Available
Yes
Ski School Min Age
2 years
Kids Ski Free
Under 5
Magic Carpet
Yes

Score Breakdown

Value for Money

7.0

Convenience

8.5

Things to Do

7.0

Parent Experience

7.5

Childcare & Learning

6.5

🎟️

Was kosten die Liftpässe?

You are paying Trois Vallees prices, which are the highest in France. But you are also getting access to 600 km of pistes, and the snow reliability at altitude means you will actually ski every day you paid for.

  • Val Thorens/Orelle day pass: EUR 55-65 for the local 150 km
  • Trois Vallees day pass: EUR 65-78 for the full 600 km
  • Children (5-12): Roughly 30% off adult rates
  • Under 5: Free
  • 6-day Trois Vallees: EUR 330-400 for adults

The Val Thorens local pass is the smart buy for families with beginners. Your kids do not need 600 km. They need the gentle runs at Roc and Plein Sud. Upgrade to the Trois Vallees pass only when someone is ready to explore Meribel or Courchevel.

Beginner magic carpets at Roc are free. True first-timers can try skiing without a pass.

No Ikon or Epic affiliation. Trois Vallees is the benchmark for large-area skiing in Europe. The prices reflect it.

💡
PRO TIP
The local Val Thorens pass is 15-20% cheaper than the Trois Vallees pass. For a family of four over six days, that difference is EUR 200+. Buy local unless you will actually use the full domain.

Available Passes


Planning Your Trip

🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?

Book an apartment in the Roc de Peclet or Place Caron area, close to the Roc beginner zone and the main lifts. Val Thorens is a purpose-built station, not a village, and location within the resort matters more than it does in a traditional Alpine town.

  • Apartments (ski-in/ski-out): EUR 800-2,000/week for a 2-bedroom depending on season and location. Properties near Place Caron offer the best lift access.
  • Residence hotels: Pierre & Vacances and similar operators have pool access and reception services. EUR 1,000-2,500/week.
  • Hotels: A handful of 3-4 star hotels with restaurants. EUR 150-300/night with breakfast.

Val Thorens is compact and car-free in the center. Everything is walkable, though "walkable" at 2,300m means more puffing than at sea level. An elevator and covered walkway system connects different levels of the resort.

Self-catering is the standard. A Sherpa supermarket and several smaller shops stock basics at mountain prices. For a full shop, drive to Moûtiers in the valley (40 minutes) or order a grocery delivery service (several operate during ski season).

💡
PRO TIP
Book facing south for afternoon sun on your balcony. North-facing apartments at 2,300m are cold and shadowed. The sun difference is dramatic.

✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Val Thorens?

Plan for a longer transfer than most French resorts. Val Thorens sits at the top of the Belleville valley, and the road up adds time regardless of which airport you fly into. The reward is guaranteed snow and a purpose-built resort where everything is at your feet once you arrive.

  • Geneva Airport (GVA): 3-3.5 hours via the Tarentaise valley
  • Lyon Airport (LYS): 3 hours via the A43 motorway
  • Chambery Airport (CMF): 2 hours. Seasonal UK budget airline flights.
  • Moûtiers station: TGV from Paris (4.5 hours), then bus to Val Thorens (1 hour).

The drive from the valley floor (Moûtiers) to Val Thorens takes 45-60 minutes on a mountain road that climbs steadily through the Belleville valley. The road is well-maintained but can be slow behind a snowplow. Snow tires are required.

You do not need a car once you arrive. Val Thorens is designed to be car-free. Park in the underground garage (EUR 80-120/week) and do not touch the car again until departure.

💡
PRO TIP
The Eurostar + TGV combination from London to Moûtiers is doable in a day (change in Paris). Combine with the shuttle bus from Moûtiers and you arrive at the resort without ever touching a steering wheel.
User photo of Val Thorens - skiing

Was gibt's abseits der Piste?

By 5pm your kids will be racing down the toboggan run in the resort center, lit up against the darkening sky, and they will beg to do it again. Val Thorens has invested heavily in off-slope family activities, and for a purpose-built resort, the variety is impressive.

  • Toboggan run: A 6km toboggan run from the summit, one of the longest in France. Open evenings with floodlights on certain days.
  • Ice driving: A frozen track where adults can drive (kids ride along). Bookable through the tourist office.
  • Zipline: The Tyrolienne zipline across the resort, 1,300m long. Age and height minimums apply.
  • Sports center: Indoor pool, fitness, climbing wall, squash courts.

Dining

Val Thorens has more restaurants than most purpose-built stations:

  • Le Chalet de la Marine: Fine dining with Savoyard influences
  • Creperies and pizzerias: Multiple options, EUR 8-12 for kids
  • Fast-food options: Burger joints and kebab shops for budget-conscious families
  • Sherpa supermarket: For self-catering supplies at mountain prices

The resort has a lively apres-ski scene, more lively than most family resorts. The Folie Douce (a famous outdoor party venue) runs daytime DJ sets on the mountain that are fun to watch from a distance but can be loud if your toddler is napping in a nearby lodge.

💡
PRO TIP
The 6km toboggan run is the highlight. Book it for an afternoon when the kids have had enough skiing. It takes 30-45 minutes to descend and is the kind of shared family experience that generates stories for years.
User photo of Val Thorens - lodge

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

💬Was sagen andere Eltern?

"We booked Val Thorens because we knew there would be snow. There was." That sentence captures the entire decision process for families who choose Europe's highest resort. Snow anxiety is the silent stress of every ski vacation booking, and Val Thorens eliminates it.

What Parents Love

  • Snow guarantee: "November through May, always skiable." Parents who have been burned by low-altitude resorts value this above all else.
  • Compact resort: "Everything walkable. No car needed for a full week." The purpose-built layout means zero transport logistics once you arrive.
  • Toboggan run: "The 6km run was the highlight of the trip for our kids." Off-slope activities rival the skiing in family reviews.

The Honest Gaps

  • No village charm: "It is a concrete station, not a chocolate-box village." Val Thorens was built in the 1970s for skiing, not aesthetics. Families who want Tyrolean charm will be disappointed.
  • Altitude effects: "Our four-year-old was tired and cranky the first day." At 2,300m, young children can feel the altitude. Hydrate aggressively and plan a gentle first day.
  • Above treeline: "When it was flat light and windy, skiing was miserable." No trees means no shelter. Bad visibility days are worse here than at lower, forested resorts.

Val Thorens is the rational choice for families who prioritize snow certainty over village character. You trade charm for reliability, trees for altitude, and a pretty setting for guaranteed conditions. For families who have limited vacation time and cannot afford a wash-out week, that trade-off is worth every concrete building in the station.

Families on the Slopes

(7 photos)

Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.

Common Questions

Everything families ask about this resort

Very much so. Around 65% of the terrain is beginner-friendly, with dedicated nursery areas featuring free magic carpets and gentle gradients. The Rond Point des Pistes zone lets first-timers build confidence before tackling chairlifts, and once they're ready, wide blues off the Peclet and Moraine lifts offer forgiving progression runs.

The sweet spot is 3-16, though there's an important caveat for very young children. At 2,300m altitude, toddlers can struggle with headaches and poor sleep for the first few days. If you're bringing under-5s, budget two acclimation days before hitting lessons hard—or consider a night at lower Les Menuires first.

Expect around €520/day for a family of four (lifts, rentals, lessons, food). The local Val Thorens-Orelle pass runs €71/day adult and €58-63/day for kids 5-17, with under-5s skiing free. Self-catering apartments start surprisingly low at €150-180 per stay—just stock up at Moûtiers supermarket on the way up to avoid resort grocery prices.

Yes—Val Thorens has a micro-crèche accepting babies from 3 months, plus ESF's Kids Club for ages 3-5 that combines childcare with half-day lessons. Prosneige even offers 'Baby Ski' sessions from age 2. The free resort shuttle stops right at the crèche, making drop-offs manageable when you're juggling everyone's schedules.

Fly into Chambéry (1h45 drive) if your dates align—smallest airport, least hassle. Geneva works too but adds an hour. The final 37km climb from Moûtiers involves 70+ hairpins, so aim for Saturday flights landing before 2pm to tackle it in daylight. Pro move: download entertainment before you leave—signal gets patchy on the mountain road.

Early season (before December 20) offers lower prices and the altitude guarantees snow. Late March/Easter is Val Thorens' secret weapon—while lower resorts turn slushy, conditions here stay solid. Avoid peak February half-term unless you book early; Sunday arrivals mean lighter traffic and often better accommodation handovers, though you'll sacrifice a ski day.

Yes! Val Thorens ski school accepts kids from age 2, which is pretty amazing for getting them started early. The instructors are used to working with tiny humans who might spend half the lesson eating snow, and they have special beginner areas that are safe and enclosed. Just manage your expectations - at 2, it's more about getting comfortable on skis and having fun in the snow than actual skiing.

Pack layers, layers, layers - Val Thorens sits at 2,300m so it gets properly cold, especially for little ones. Bring extra gloves (kids lose them constantly), hand warmers for lift rides, and those face masks that cover everything but their eyes. Don't forget regular clothes for après-ski and indoor time, plus any comfort items like favorite stuffies since the altitude can make some kids feel off the first day or two.

Not at all - despite being part of the massive 3 Vallées, Val Thorens has plenty of wide, gentle green runs perfect for building confidence. The Plein Sud and Cascades areas are fantastic for nervous parents and kids, with long, mellow slopes where you can practice without feeling rushed. Plus, since it's high altitude, the snow quality stays consistent, which means fewer icy patches that spook beginners.

Most ski schools include lunch supervision, and kids typically eat at mountain restaurants like La Chalet or 3200 Bar Restaurant. The instructors know which places are kid-friendly and fast (think pasta, pizza, and fries - not fancy French cuisine). If your child is picky or has allergies, definitely mention it when booking lessons, and pack backup snacks because mountain food can be hit or miss with little ones.

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

Unser Fazit

Würden wir Val Thorens empfehlen?

Was es wirklich kostet

Val Thorens is priced between Les Menuires (below) and Meribel (above). Six-day Three Valleys passes cost EUR 409/adult and EUR 335/child, same everywhere in the system.

The budget family in a self-catering apartment, packing lunches: a week for four runs EUR 3,200-3,800. Accommodation is cheaper than Meribel but more than Les Menuires, reflecting the altitude premium.

The comfortable family with a mid-range hotel, mountain lunches, daily ski school: EUR 4,500-5,500.

For context: Les Menuires is 15-20% cheaper on accommodation for the same Three Valleys pass with slightly less altitude. Meribel costs 20-30% more for a proper village. Courchevel costs 40-60% more for the prestige. Brides-les-Bains saves 40%+ but adds a gondola commute and a lower starting point. Val Thorens is where families who prioritize snow and convenience over charm end up, and they rarely regret it.

Your smartest money move: Book a self-catering apartment and buy the Family Flex pass. Your Three Valleys access costs the same as everywhere in the system, but Val Thorens' altitude means you will never lose a day to poor snow conditions.

Worauf ihr achten müsst

At 2,300m, altitude affects some children. Headaches, disturbed sleep, and fatigue on the first day are common. Push fluids, arrive early in the day, and plan a gentle first afternoon. Most kids adapt within 24 hours, but it is worth knowing.

The village is purpose-built and looks it. Functional, compact, and lacking the charm of a Savoyard village. Saint-Martin-de-Belleville, 15 minutes down the valley, is the Three Valleys antidote to Val Thorens' architecture.

The exposed location means wind. Val Thorens gets more wind closures than lower Three Valleys resorts. When it blows, visibility above tree line goes to zero and lifts close. There are no trees at 2,300m. On windy days, ski down to Les Menuires where the trees provide shelter and visibility.

The resort has more going on after dark than most purpose-built stations: a lively apres-ski scene, decent restaurants, and a surprisingly good atmosphere for a resort that looks like a moon base. Families eat early and let the night crowd take over.

If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Tignes for comparable snow reliability and altitude with a different ski area.

Würden wir Val Thorens empfehlen?

Book Val Thorens if snow reliability is what keeps you up at night. At 2,300m, it gets snow first, loses it last, and accesses 600km of Three Valleys from the top of the system. The compact, largely car-free village centre makes the morning routine simple, and the family infrastructure has improved markedly in recent years.

Book ESF or Prosneige ski school first for February. Then search Pierre and Vacances, the Val Thorens tourism office, or Booking.com. Buy Three Valleys passes on les3vallees.com for Family Flex pricing.

Fly into Chambery (2h), Lyon (2.5h), or Geneva (2.5h). If you want the Three Valleys with better village character, Meribel or Saint-Martin-de-Belleville are lower but prettier. Les Menuires, 10 minutes below, offers cheaper Three Valleys slopeside skiing. If you want high altitude and snow reliability outside the Three Valleys, Tignes (2,100m with glacier) is the alternative. Val Thorens is for families who want the snow equation solved.