Kreischberg, Austria: Family Ski Guide
Two ski schools, one mascot, zero excuses to skip day two.
Last updated: April 2026

Austria
Kreischberg
Book Kreischberg if your children are 4-10, this is their first or second time on skis, and you want lower crowds and prices than the big Styrian resorts. Stay in Murau (15 minutes) for a real town, or at the base for convenience. If your kids progress fast and want more terrain mid-trip, Schladming is 45 minutes away. If you want a similar small-resort feel but in Tyrol, Schlick 2000 is the comparison.
Dieser Reiseguide ist derzeit auf Englisch verfügbar. Wir arbeiten an der deutschen Version!
Ist Kreischberg gut für Familien?
Kreischberg is Schladming's quieter neighbor in Styria. Smaller (42km vs 123km), cheaper (EUR 52 vs EUR 73 adult pass), and far less crowded. The kids' area is solid, the terrain is mostly blue and red, and the snowpark is surprisingly good. If Schladming feels too big and busy for your first family ski trip, Kreischberg is the low-pressure alternative in the same region.
At 42.5 km total with only 11 km of blue (easy) piste, families with already-confident intermediate or advanced skiers will outgrow the mountain by day three.
Biggest tradeoff
Wie ist das Skifahren für Familien?
The children's learning area at Kreischberg sits at 1,800m, right where the 10-seater gondola drops you off. This is important: your four-year-old's first skiing experience happens at altitude, on reliable snow, in a self-contained zone separated from the main piste traffic. You ride up together. The beginner world is right there.
The progression infrastructure runs in a clear sequence. A magic carpet and baby lift handle the absolute first-timers, the shuffle-and-slide phase where falling over is the main activity. A mini wave run adds texture once kids can stay upright, and the Kreischi drag lift extends their range once they're ready. From there, 11km of blue piste provides the next step before stronger children graduate to the 23km of red runs that make up the mountain's core.
Two competing ski schools operate separate children's areas at the same gondola station. Richi's Skischule Kreischberg runs its own branded kids' zone and holds that 4.8 out of 5 rating from 167 CheckYeti reviews, parents on the platform cite English-speaking instructors, organised end-of-week races, and a structured progression system. Next door, Ski School Mayer operates Biene Mayer Land, a Maya the Bee-themed enclosed learning area with its own branded identity. Having two schools side by side means availability is rarely an issue, even in peak weeks.
Competition keeps standards visible.
Austrian ski schools traditionally group children by ability rather than age. Your six-year-old might ski alongside an eight-year-old who's at the same level. This is standard across Austria and generally produces faster progression, children advance when they're ready, not when their age cohort moves up.
For families where one parent wants to ski while the other stays with beginners, the lunch supervision service is the unlock. At €25 per child per day, ski school instructors escort children to named on-mountain restaurants at midday, beginners go to Kreischbergwirt, more advanced groups to Rioglerhütte or Restaurant Grillboden. That buys you a genuine two-hour window to ski the reds or the speed track together.
Then there are the three themed adventure courses, free with any lift pass, that give children a reason to ski beyond the lesson. KreiSchi Safari runs animal figures (lions, elephants) along a forest trail. Dinowald places dinosaur models through the stone-pine forest. KreiSchi Geisterbahn is a ghost-themed course that older children (7+) seem to gravitate toward based on parent reports. These aren't token decorations. They're full trail-length experiences that transform "let's do another run" into "let's go find the dinosaurs."
Your child's hot chocolate reward comes with a view of the Murtal valley from 1,800m. That part writes itself.
For teens or confident kids ready to push further, a snowpark at 1,900m offers beginner and medium lines, enough for a first attempt at freestyle without the intimidation of an expert park. A speed track (clocking over 80km/h) and a 20-gate race course provide measurable progression that competitive kids respond to. The Orange Sixpack chairlift, Kreischberg's signature piece of infrastructure, with a distinctive orange dome providing UV, rain, and snow protection, services the upper mountain and moves 2,000 people per hour, keeping queues minimal.
And yes, Kreischi: the resort's own mascot, available as a cuddly toy from the lift ticket office for a few euros. Children meet Kreischi in person at scheduled on-slope events throughout the season. It's a small thing. Your five-year-old will not think it's a small thing.

📊The Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Family Score | 6.9Good |
Best Age Range | 4–14 years |
Kid-Friendly Terrain | 28%Average |
Ski School Min Age | 4 years |
Kids Ski Free | — |
Magic Carpet | Yes |
Kids Terrain Park | Yes |
Score Breakdown
Value for Money
Convenience
Things to Do
Parent Experience
Childcare & Learning
Planning Your Trip
💬Was sagen andere Eltern?
First-Timers, Ideal. The entire beginner world sits at 1,800m, accessed by a single gondola ride. Your child goes from magic carpet to baby lift to their first short blue run without ever crossing a red piste or navigating the full mountain. Under-6s ride free. Richi's Ski School takes children from age 4, and that 4.8-star rating from 167 reviews isn't decorative, parents consistently cite patient, English-speaking instructors. *Caveat:* German dominates on signage and in restaurants. You'll manage, but don't expect bilingual menus everywhere.
Annual Families, Workable for one visit, probably not two. If your kids are still in the confidence-building phase (ages 5-9, progressing from blue to red), Kreischberg's themed trails and race course add genuine variety. But 42.5km is 42.5km. Families who ski a week each year and have children already linking parallel turns should look at Nassfeld or Schladming instead. *Caveat:* The Lachtal combined pass adds a second mountain, but it doesn't transform the total terrain into a week-filling proposition for strong intermediates.
Mixed-Ability Families, Good fit with one gap. The gondola hub model works: beginners stay at the 1,800m children's area while stronger skiers access 23km of red runs and the speed track, then everyone regroups at the same mountain station for lunch. The ski school lunch supervision service (€25/day, children escorted to specific on-mountain restaurants) frees parents to ski together for a genuine half-day. *Caveat:* No confirmed nursery or crèche for children under 4. If your family includes a toddler below ski school age, you'll need to arrange your own childcare.
Budget Families, Good fit, especially late season. The Family Days promotion (March 16–April 6) eliminates lift pass costs for under-16s entirely. Group lessons at €42 per day and free-access themed adventure courses mean your on-mountain spend stays controlled. *Caveat:* We lack confirmed budget accommodation pricing, so total trip costs are harder to forecast than at more data-rich resorts.
Families on the Slopes
(8 photos)Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.
Was kosten die Liftpässe?
The clearest money-saving move at Kreischberg is timing. During the official Family Days promotion (March 16 to April 6, 2026, confirmed on kreischberg.at), every child under 16 skis free when accompanied by at least one paying parent. For a family with two kids aged 8 and 12, that eliminates €84 per day in youth lift passes, roughly €420 across a five-day trip.
Under-6s ride lifts free all season, no conditions attached.
Buy lift passes online through kreischberg.at to skip the ticket office queue. The €3 Key-Card deposit is refundable when you return the card, don't lose it in a snowsuit pocket.
Group kids' lessons at €42 per day (four hours) through Richi's Ski School are competitive for Austrian resorts; the €25 lunch supervision add-on also functions as a childcare substitute for families without other options, freeing both parents to ski from 4am to 2pm.
The three themed adventure courses (KreiSchi Safari, Dinowald, KreiSchi Geisterbahn) are free with any lift pass. On a rest day or half-day, these provide genuine on-mountain activity without additional cost, and children treat them as destinations in their own right.
For families considering multiple resort visits in Styria, the Mur-Mürz Top Skipass and Steiermark Joker pass cover broader regional access including Lachtal. We don't have confirmed pricing for these passes, but they're worth checking on kreischberg.at if you're planning more than five ski days in the region.
Planning Your Trip
🏠Wo sollte eure Familie übernachten?
Accommodation data for Kreischberg is thinner than we'd like. We have one confirmed midpoint at approximately €234 per night, but no verified budget or luxury price tiers. Here's what we can tell you with confidence.
The nearest village, St. Lorenzen ob Murau, sits just 600 metres from the base lifts, walkable in ski boots if the path is cleared. St. Georgen ob Murau is 1.4km away. Both are small, quiet Styrian settlements rather than resort towns, which means lower accommodation costs than Tyrolean equivalents but fewer evening amenities.
Hotel Gasthof Lercher is a confirmed regional option in the area, operating in the traditional Styrian Gasthof model: family-run, with hearty Austrian breakfast typically included. Styrian guesthouses lean toward warm wood interiors, generous portions, and owners who remember your children's names by day two. This is a genuine cultural positive if you're accustomed to anonymous chain hotels.
Murau, 8km from the resort, offers a larger selection of lodging and services if you prefer a proper town base. The trade-off is a daily drive to the gondola.
We don't have confirmed ski-in/ski-out properties. Check kreischberg.at's accommodation page directly for current availability and family rates.
✈️Wie kommt ihr nach Kreischberg?
Kreischberg is a car-access resort. The address is Kreischbergstraße 1, 8861 St. Georgen am Kreischberg, in the Murtal valley of Styria. Graz airport is 100km away; Salzburg 150km. Neither transfer distance is confirmed precisely in our data, so build in buffer time and check winter road conditions. Snow chains are legally required to be carried in Austria during winter months. We don't have confirmed rail connection or ski bus data, if you're relying on public transport, contact the resort directly before booking.

☕Was gibt's abseits der Piste?
A tubing park sits right next to the gondola mountain station, with its own dedicated tubing lift, so children who finish ski school early or need a non-skiing afternoon have an immediate option without descending the mountain. Kreischi character appearances happen at scheduled events through the season; check the resort's events calendar for dates.
Murau, 8km down the valley, is a well-preserved medieval Styrian market town worth a half-day visit if weather closes in. The Murauer brewery is a point of local pride, not a tourist attraction per se, but a real working brewery in a town with cobblestone streets and a castle ruin. One parent can take the kids for Apfelstrudel while the other samples the local product.

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 Kreischberg empfehlen?
Was es wirklich kostet
Adult day passes EUR 52, kids EUR 42 (yes, the kid/adult gap is unusually small here). Total lift cost for a family of four is about EUR 188/day, which is one of the lowest in Austria. Budget around EUR 340-380/day all-in. Your smartest money move: Kreischberg packages from the Murau region tourism board, which bundle lift, accommodation, and lessons. Compare to Schladming at EUR 73/adult and the daily savings of EUR 40+ per family add up to a free extra day over a week.
Worauf ihr achten müsst
At 42km, a strong intermediate will ski everything in a day. If your family includes a teenager who already skis well, Kreischberg will bore them. Schladming or Saalbach are better for mixed-ability families who need range. Kreischberg is a beginner specialist that's honest about what it is.
If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Katschberg for a purpose-built family resort with snow-sure altitude.
Würden wir Kreischberg empfehlen?
Book Kreischberg if your children are 4-10, this is their first or second time on skis, and you want lower crowds and prices than the big Styrian resorts. Stay in Murau (15 minutes) for a real town, or at the base for convenience. If your kids progress fast and want more terrain mid-trip, Schladming is 45 minutes away. If you want a similar small-resort feel but in Tyrol, Schlick 2000 is the comparison.
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