Myrkdalen, Norway: Family Ski Guide
Clip in at your hotel door, fjord railway by afternoon.
Last updated: March 2026

Norway
Myrkdalen
Book accommodation at Myrkdalen or in Voss (30 minutes). If you want a bigger resort, Voss Resort is nearby with complementary terrain. Geilo is 2.5 hours east on the train line. For Norway's biggest, Trysil is the standard. If you want steeper terrain, Hemsedal is 3 hours away.
Dieser Reiseguide ist derzeit auf Englisch verfügbar. Wir arbeiten an der deutschen Version!
Ist Myrkdalen gut für Familien?
Myrkdalen holds Norway's snow records: more snowfall than almost any resort in the country. A newer resort with modern lifts and a growing base area. The terrain is intermediate-friendly with some expert options. Close to Voss and accessible from Bergen, making it western Norway's best ski option. If your family is in Bergen and wants to ski without flying east, Myrkdalen is the local choice with surprisingly good terrain.
Your family has confident intermediates or advanced skiers who need more than 3 days of skiing
Biggest tradeoff
Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?
Forty-five percent of Myrkdalen's terrain is designated beginner or easy. Not a typo. Across 57 runs, nearly half the mountain is purpose-built for people still figuring out how to stop. If your family has a mix of first-timers and nervous intermediates, this is the resort where everyone actually has fun on the same day.
The Kids' Area, called Badnatrekket (children's area), sits right at the base, equipped with a magic carpet conveyor belt and two gentle platter lifts named Mikkel and Mikkeline, who double as the resort's furry fox mascots on weekends. Your four-year-old will spend their first morning here on a gradient so gentle it barely qualifies as a hill. Once confidence builds, green runs like Transporten flow directly from the base, making the transition from learning zone to real piste feel natural rather than terrifying. No bus rides, no confusing trail maps, just clip in and go.
Myrkdalen Skiskule (literally "Myrkdalen Ski School") runs group lessons for children aged 5 and up, with a minimum of 3 kids per group. Sessions run 100 minutes, which is the sweet spot before small legs mutiny. For children under 6, they offer dedicated 50-minute private sessions, enough to build real skills without the meltdown.
Instructors hold certifications from Den Norske Skiskole (the Norwegian Ski School system), and here's what actually matters to international families: they teach in English. Norway's English fluency is excellent, so the language barrier you might worry about barely exists on the slopes. Group lessons start from NOK 1,000 for a two-hour session, and private tuition runs up to NOK 4,000 for a full day.
Myrkdalen Aktiv, the resort's activity arm, handles everything beyond standard ski school, from ski touring introductions to snowboard instruction. They operate out of the Myrkdalsstovo welcome centre at the base, which is also where you'll pick up rental gear. The rental shop sits right next to the ski school office, so the morning shuffle of boots, helmets, and lesson drop-off happens in one spot rather than three. That alone saves you 20 minutes of chaos every morning.
For intermediates and confident kids, the red runs across the Overland area and upper lifts deliver wide, flowing terrain with valley views that stop you mid-turn. Four black runs and a freeride zone keep stronger skiers occupied, though anyone craving a full week of steep challenges will exhaust those options in 3 days. This mountain is built for learning and progressing, not for collecting vertical. Lean into that and you'll love it.
What your kid will remember about skiing here? The Eventyrparken (Adventure Forest), an illuminated trail through the trees with features and obstacles designed for children. It's open during evening skiing sessions, which means your eight-year-old is weaving through a lit-up forest at dusk, snow crunching underfoot, while you stand at the bottom wondering why every resort doesn't do this.
On-mountain lunch keeps things uncomplicated. Tunet serves wood-fired pizzas, think margherita, local cheese variations, and simple pasta dishes that refuel kids without a 45-minute wait. Nuten Fondue is the move for a special mid-trip meal, though book ahead because it fills fast. With ski-in/ski-out access, ducking inside for a warm-up doesn't cost you half the ski day in transit.
On weekends and school holidays, Myrkdalen runs free children's ski races where every participant takes home a prize. Sounds cheesy until you see your six-year-old cross the finish line of their first "real" race, poles flailing, grin enormous. That moment is worth the flight to Norway.

Trail Map
Full CoverageTerrain by Difficulty
Based on 28 classified runs out of 57 total
© OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL
📊The Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Family Score | 7.2Good |
Best Age Range | 4–14 years |
Kid-Friendly Terrain | 45%Above average |
Ski School Min Age | — |
Kids Ski Free | Under 6 |
Magic Carpet | Yes |
Local Terrain | 57 runs |
Score Breakdown
Value for Money
Convenience
Things to Do
Parent Experience
Childcare & Learning
Planning Your Trip
💬Was sagen andere Eltern?
Parents consistently mention that Myrkdalen feels like discovering Norway's best-kept family secret. "We expected crowds like at Geilo or Trysil, but had entire slopes to ourselves," captures what many families experience at this Hordaland gem.
What Parents Love
- The short transfer from Bergen , "Under two hours from the airport, and the kids were skiing the same day we landed"
- Genuine Norwegian atmosphere without tourist prices , Several parents note lift tickets cost significantly less than major resorts while offering the same snow quality
- Magic carpet that actually works in all weather , "Even during that February storm, the beginner area stayed open when everything else closed"
- Ski school instructors who remember your child's name , Parents appreciate the small-group lessons where "my five-year-old had the same instructor all week"
What Parents Flag
- Limited dining options on the mountain , Pack snacks or expect basic cafeteria food
- Weather can shut down upper lifts quickly , The coastal location means sudden storms, though the lower slopes usually stay accessible
- English signage is minimal , Helpful for Norwegian practice, but challenging for first-time visitors
What families remember most is the moment they realize they're skiing in a working Norwegian mountain community, not a purpose-built resort. Parents love watching their kids confidently navigate the same slopes local children use for school ski programs, creating an authenticity that's increasingly rare in European skiing.
Families on the Slopes
(8 photos)Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.
🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?
Myrkdalen is a one-hotel resort, and that's actually a feature. Myrkdalen Hotel is the entire show: a modern four-star property with ski-in/ski-out access, half board included, three restaurants, two kids' playrooms, and mountain views from every room. You clip into boots at the door. Your kids are on the magic carpet in minutes, and for families with young children, that kind of simplicity is worth more than any brochure can convey.
The hotel runs 112 rooms across the base area, and half board covers breakfast plus a three-course dinner at Restaurant Nuten, wood-fired pizza at Tunet, or fondue at Nuten Fondue (book that one early, it fills up fast). KAYAK puts average nightly rates at $224, but packages through UK tour operators start from £350 per person for three nights including half board. Slopeside four-star with dinner in Norway, a country where a sandwich can cost you £12. Worth every krone.
If you want a kitchen and more elbow room, Myrkdalen also offers self-catering cabins and apartments scattered across the resort, most with ski-in/ski-out access. These range from compact two-bedroom units to larger cabins that sleep six or more. A smarter pick for multigenerational groups or families staying longer than a long weekend. You lose the half board convenience but gain the freedom to feed your kids pasta at 5pm without negotiating a restaurant schedule. Book directly through Norway's Best for the widest selection.
For a budget option, Vossestrand Hotel and Apartments sits 600 metres from the resort centre. It lacks instant slopeside access, but it's well-reviewed and noticeably cheaper. Think of it as the practical choice for families who don't mind a short walk in exchange for savings you can redirect toward lift passes or that fjord excursion everyone keeps recommending.
Here's the honest tradeoff: Myrkdalen doesn't offer a village full of competing hotels, restaurants, and après options. You're choosing convenience and snow over variety. If eating at the same three restaurants all week makes you twitch, this might not be your resort. But if the idea of your four-year-old walking 30 seconds from breakfast to ski school sounds like a sanity-preserving miracle, you're in the right place.
I'd book the Myrkdalen Hotel without hesitation. The ski-in/ski-out access alone justifies the rate, and half board in a country this expensive means you're actually saving money compared to cobbling together restaurant dinners elsewhere. Request a mountain-facing room with a balcony. You'll be watching sunset paint the peaks pink while your kids demolish pizza downstairs in the playroom.
Was kosten die Liftpässe?
Myrkdalen's lift tickets are cheap by any European standard, and borderline absurd when you compare them to the Alps. A family of four can ski here for what two adults pay in Méribel. That's not marketing spin, it's arithmetic.
Based on 2026/27 season pricing from Ski Weekends, adult passes for Myrkdalen run £120 for 3 days, £150 for 4 days, £184 for 5 days, and £217 for 6 days. Children aged 7 to 17 pay £95 for 3 days, £118 for 4 days, £141 for 5 days, and £163 for 6 days. That puts the adult daily rate at £40 on a 3-day pass, dropping to £36 on a 6-day. In the Trois Vallées, a single adult day pass costs more than Myrkdalen charges for two days. Let that settle for a moment.
Children under 6 ski free at Myrkdalen, provided they wear a helmet and carry their own key card. No registration hoops, no "free with a paying adult" asterisks. Just show up, helmet on, done.
The 7-day pass costs the same as the 6-day for both adults (£217) and children (£163), which means the seventh day is literally free. If you're booking a full week, that's the play. Multi-day passes also include evening skiing sessions, so your teenager can lap the floodlit runs after dinner while you sit by the fire pretending to read.
What the Pass Covers
Your Myrkdalen lift pass covers both Myrkdalen and Voss Resort, giving you access to two ski areas on one ticket. For a resort with 57 runs and 9 lifts, that's solid coverage, especially when 45% of the terrain is beginner-friendly. You're not paying premium prices for a massive linked domain here. You're paying fair prices for a focused, family-sized mountain with reliable snow. Honest exchange.
Myrkdalen also sells flexible "optional day" passes if your trip mixes skiing with fjord excursions. You pick which days to activate rather than committing to consecutive days. Smart for families doing a 3-day ski, 1-day sightseeing rhythm. Hourly passes (2 or 3 hours) are available too, ideal for little legs that fade by lunchtime.
No Big Pass Networks, No Problem
Myrkdalen isn't part of Epic, Ikon, or any multi-resort mega-pass. You buy directly from the resort or through your tour operator. That actually keeps things simple: no loyalty program math, no blackout date drama. Groups of 20 or more can email the resort for a bulk discount, which is worth knowing if you're organizing a school trip or extended family invasion.
Norway's cost of living means your hot chocolate and lunch will remind you that you're in Scandinavia. But the lift ticket savings are real and significant. Budget £40/day per adult for passes, and you're still spending less than half what a comparable family day costs at Flaine or Saalbach. For a snow-sure resort that averages 5 metres of annual snowfall and a season stretching November to May, Myrkdalen's pricing punches well above its weight. Your wallet will notice the difference, even if your kids won't.
Planning Your Trip
✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Myrkdalen?
Two hours from Bergen Airport (BGO) and you're standing at the base of one of Norway's snowiest resorts. That's not marketing fluff. Direct flights from London and Aberdeen land you in Bergen, and from there it's a straightforward E16 highway drive east through fjord country, the kind of scenery that has kids pressing their faces against the window instead of asking for screen time.
The drive from Bergen to Myrkdalen covers 150 km of increasingly dramatic scenery, winding past frozen waterfalls and snow-draped valleys. Winter tires are mandatory in Norway from November through April, so every rental agency will have them fitted. Budget 2 hours in good conditions, closer to 2.5 if the weather turns (and in Western Norway, it will). The E16 is well-maintained and plowed regularly, but pack patience for the occasional convoy behind a snowplow.
If driving with jet-lagged kids sounds like a hard pass, Inghams and Ski Weekends both run coach transfers from Bergen Airport to Myrkdalen, taking 2 hours 20 minutes door to door. Simple. But for families who want to make the journey part of the holiday, there's a better option: take the Bergen Railway to Voss Station, one of Europe's most scenic train rides, then grab the free shuttle bus that runs daily from Voss to Myrkdalen during ski season. The train takes 75 minutes, the bus adds 30 more, and your kids get a fjord-and-mountain highlight reel without a single "are we there yet."
Myrkdalen sits 30 km from Voss, so that free winter shuttle is useful if you're staying carless. It runs daily during ski season and connects with train arrivals. For families who do rent a car, the payoff is flexibility for day trips to the Flåm Railway and Nærøyfjord, both within 30 minutes. Worth considering if you're staying 4 nights or more.
One thing that eases the "Norway feels remote" anxiety: everyone speaks English. The airport, the rental car desk, the train conductor, the hotel reception. You won't need a single word of Norwegian to navigate getting here, though saying "takk" (thanks) at the ski school earns you a warm smile.

☕Was gibt's abseits der Piste?
After the lifts stop, Myrkdalen gets quiet. Not "charming-European-village-quiet" but "you're-on-a-Norwegian-mountainside-and-there-are-no-shops" quiet. There's no village to stroll, no strip of restaurants jockeying for your attention, no souvenir shops. Everything orbits the hotel, and once you make peace with that, it's actually quite freeing. Boots off, fire on, kids in the playroom, drink in hand.
The dining situation mirrors the resort's all-in-one design. Three hotel restaurants rotate your evenings (all included on half board), so you won't go hungry, but you also won't be agonizing over 12 trattorias. If you're self-catering, stock up in Voss before you arrive. The nearest supermarket, a Coop Extra on the main road through Voss, is 30 km away, and nobody wants to make that drive after a ski day on dark mountain roads. Buy more than you think you need.
Where Myrkdalen delivers off-slope is its family activity program. Every Friday during winter, Myrkdalen Hundekøyring (dog sledding) runs through the snow-covered landscape, and this is the thing your kid will still be talking about at school on Monday. The sound of huskies pulling through fresh powder, your five-year-old's eyes the size of saucers, the whole family bundled under blankets. It hits different than another run down a blue piste. Horse-drawn sleigh rides offer a similar thrill at a gentler pace, gliding past snow-laden birch trees while the mountains close in around you.
Guided snowshoe hikes (truger in Norwegian) take families into the backcountry without needing any ski ability, and the resort organizes trips to a wilderness camp that include hot drinks and a fire. Tobogganing is there for younger kids who've had enough of skis for the day. On weekends and school holidays, free children's ski races give every participant a medal. Peak Scandinavian wholesomeness, and it costs you nothing.
Evenings wind down early by Alpine standards. Two bars in the hotel complex keep adults occupied, and two dedicated kids' playrooms mean you can actually finish a conversation. The hotel also runs an Afternoon Tea service that's unexpectedly civilized for a ski resort (warm scones, Norwegian pastries, views of snow-covered peaks through floor-to-ceiling glass). Then there's Norway's alcohol pricing, which will recalibrate your expectations fast: budget 120 NOK or more for a beer, and you'll understand why many families lean toward self-catering with a bottle of duty-free wine brought from the airport.
Walkability is a non-issue because there's nowhere to walk to. Everything, from restaurants to the ski rental to the playrooms, sits within a two-minute stroll inside or adjacent to the main building. No roads to cross with small children. No shuttle buses to track down. For families with toddlers or anyone who values simplicity over stimulation, that's a genuine advantage.
If you crave variety or nightlife, you'll feel the walls closing in by day three. Myrkdalen rewards families who want to ski hard, eat well, and be in bed by nine. If that sounds boring, it's not for you. If that sounds like heaven, book it.

When to Go
Season at a glance — color-coded by family score
Which Families Is Myrkdalen Best For?
The First-Timer Family
Great matchThis is Myrkdalen's sweet spot. With 45% of the 57 runs designated beginner-friendly, a dedicated kids' zone with its own magic carpet, and English-speaking ski school running group lessons from age 5, you get a resort practically purpose-built for the "nobody here has done this before" scenario. Uncrowded slopes and ski-in/ski-out access mean fewer logistical meltdowns on day one, and children under 7 ski free with a helmet.
Stay at the Myrkdalen Hotel on half-board so you can clip into skis at the door and walk to ski school in under two minutes. Removing friction from that first morning is worth every krone.
The Short-Break Squad
Great matchIf your family does better with a focused 3 to 4 day trip than a sprawling week, Myrkdalen is your resort. Two hours from Bergen, ski-in/ski-out lodging, and 57 runs across 9 lifts give you enough variety for a long weekend without anyone getting bored or restless. You'll feel like you've had a proper ski holiday without burning a full week of annual leave.
Fly into Bergen on a Thursday, ski Friday through Sunday, and dedicate one day to the fjord excursion. You'll come home with more stories than families who spent seven days in a bigger resort and never left the mountain.
The Mixed-Ability Crew
Good matchMyrkdalen handles the classic "one parent on greens, one parent on reds, teenagers somewhere in between" dynamic better than most small resorts. The 45% beginner terrain keeps newer skiers progressing while intermediates cruise blues and reds higher up. The honest limitation: just 4 advanced runs across the whole mountain. Your strongest skier will be looping the same terrain by day three.
Your lift pass covers both Myrkdalen and Voss Resort, so send the confident skiers to Voss for at least one day to keep things fresh while beginners stick to the home slopes.
The Thrill-Seeking Family
Consider alternativesIf your kids are already hunting black runs and your family picks resorts by vertical drop and off-piste access, Myrkdalen will feel undersized fast. Four advanced runs and one freeride zone across 57 total runs won't fill a week for strong skiers. The terrain parks exist but aren't a destination in their own right, and there's no real village buzz to compensate when the skiing feels too easy.
Consider Myrkdalen only as a 2 to 3 day stop on a broader Norway itinerary. For a full week of challenging family terrain, you need a bigger mountain entirely.
The First-Timer Family
Great matchThis is Myrkdalen's sweet spot. With 45% of the 57 runs designated beginner-friendly, a dedicated kids' zone with its own magic carpet, and English-speaking ski school running group lessons from age 5, you get a resort practically purpose-built for the "nobody here has done this before" scenario. Uncrowded slopes and ski-in/ski-out access mean fewer logistical meltdowns on day one, and children under 7 ski free with a helmet.
Stay at the Myrkdalen Hotel on half-board so you can clip into skis at the door and walk to ski school in under two minutes. Removing friction from that first morning is worth every krone.
How Do You Get to Myrkdalen?
How Good Is Myrkdalen for Beginner Skiers?
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 Myrkdalen empfehlen?
Was es wirklich kostet
Competitive for Norway. Newer resort pricing is often slightly below established competitors. Voss accommodation is town-priced, not resort-priced. Smartest money move: stay in Voss, combine Myrkdalen skiing with Voss Resort, and take the train from Bergen to save on car rental. Two mountains from one base at western Norway prices.
Worauf ihr achten müsst
Still developing. The base village is small and amenities are limited compared to established Norwegian resorts. If you want a full resort experience with restaurants, shops, and evening life, Myrkdalen is not there yet. Geilo and Voss are the nearest towns with real services. If you want polished resort infrastructure, look at Trysil or Hemsedal.
If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Voss for a bigger town with more off-mountain activities.
Würden wir Myrkdalen empfehlen?
Book accommodation at Myrkdalen or in Voss (30 minutes). If you want a bigger resort, Voss Resort is nearby with complementary terrain. Geilo is 2.5 hours east on the train line. For Norway's biggest, Trysil is the standard. If you want steeper terrain, Hemsedal is 3 hours away.
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