Gerlitzen, Austria: Family Ski Guide
Carinthia's only certified beginner resort. Bear shows up daily. โฌ35 kids.
Last updated: April 2026

Austria
Gerlitzen
Book Gerlitzen if your youngest is between 3 and 8, nobody in the group needs challenging terrain, and you want the most structured beginner experience in southern Austria. Three geographically separated Snow Bear Worlds mean your children aren't crammed into a single crowded practice zone, each has its own magic carpets, instructors, and space to fall over without an audience. Don't book it if your teenager already skis reds confidently or if you want serious aprรจs-ski. They'll be climbing the walls by Wednesday. Booking sequence: ski school at Feuerberg first (it fills fastest during peak weeks), then accommodation, then flights into Klagenfurt. Total planning time: one evening after the kids are in bed.
Is Gerlitzen Good for Families?
The Kanzelbahn cable car doors open at mid-station and your four-year-old spots a life-sized bear dancing in the snow.
That's Gerlitzen in a single frame, Carinthia's only Austrian Cable Car Association-certified beginner and family resort, part of the Villach ski mountains network, where three separate Snow Bear Worlds and a 42% easy-terrain ratio exist to get small children skiing with minimal parental stress. The honest downside: two black runs total.
Strong skiers in your group will run out of mountain by Tuesday.
Your group includes advanced skiers needing more than two black runs
Biggest tradeoff
What's the Skiing Like for Families?
This is the easiest place to learn to ski in Carinthia, and that's not marketing, it's an Austrian Cable Car Association certification that no other resort in the province holds. The mountain is structured around progression, not exploration. Your child moves through three distinct zones as their confidence grows, each with its own instructors, magic carpets, and dedicated children's lifts.
- First steps (Kanzelhรถhe): Snow Bear World at the mid-station, reached directly from the Kanzelbahn cable car. Magic carpets and a children's ski carousel let four-year-olds find their balance on snow without any chairlift anxiety. Bino the Bear, the resort mascot, shows up here daily during winter season to dance and play with kids. For children under six, Bino is the holiday highlight, full stop.
- First green runs (Feuerberg): The Feuerberg Snow Bear World sits at 1,769m beside Mountain Resort Feuerberg with its own practice slopes and on-site rental shop stocking Blizzard, Head, Elan, and Fischer gear. This is where confidence builds over two to three days.
- First real lift: The Moserbahn double chair connects children's zones to the Sonnenlift practice slope (run 15) and Moser-Abfahrt (run 2a). This is the progression moment, the first time your child rides a proper chairlift and skis down a real slope.
- First blue run: Once they're linking turns on run 15, the 7.5km Klรถsterle descent from the 1,911m summit drops 900 vertical metres on mostly blue terrain. It's the defining family run, long enough to feel like an adventure, gentle enough to finish with a grin.
Mixed-ability families: the compact layout here actually works in your favour. The Moserbahn chair links the children's zones directly to 12 red intermediate runs, so a parent skiing reds can reach a child finishing their lesson within five minutes.
- Meeting point: Kanzelhรถhe mid-station, where the Moserbahn, cable car, and Snow Bear World converge, the natural regrouping spot.
- Shared run: The 7.5km Klรถsterle descent works as a whole-family event once children reach blue-run standard.
- Limitation: Two black runs won't keep strong skiers engaged beyond a morning. Confident intermediates should accept this is a cruising week, not a progression week.

Trail Map
Full CoverageTerrain by Difficulty
Based on 74 classified runs out of 76 total
ยฉ OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL
๐The Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Family Score | 7Good |
Best Age Range | 3โ14 years |
Kid-Friendly Terrain | 62%Very beginner-friendly |
Childcare Available | Yes โ |
Ski School Min Age | โ |
Kids Ski Free | โ |
Kids Terrain Park | Yes |
Local Terrain | 76 runs |
Score Breakdown
Value for Money
Convenience
Things to Do
Parent Experience
Childcare & Learning
Planning Your Trip
๐ Where Should Your Family Stay?
Book Mountain Resort Feuerberg first, then look at valley alternatives only if it's full or over budget.
- Best convenience, Mountain Resort Feuerberg: Ski-in/ski-out at 1,769m with its own Snow Bear World, ski school, and equipment rental at the door. Based on available pricing data, rates run around โฌ136/night, verify directly, as this varies by season and room type. The honest downside: it's essentially the only on-mountain accommodation, so school holidays book out months ahead.
- Best value, Lakeside guesthouses: Carinthian villages around Ossiacher Lake, Bodensdorf, Treffen, Annenheim, offer quieter, significantly cheaper accommodation with lake views. Self-catering apartments here let families cut breakfast costs and spread out across real rooms. Your daily commute is the Kanzelbahn cable car.
- Best space, Apartments in Treffen or Annenheim: Families with a toddler and older kids benefit from kitchens, separate bedrooms, and easy parking at the valley station. These book more flexibly than Feuerberg, even into January.
We don't have verified pricing for valley accommodation, check booking platforms for current rates. Budget families should focus their search on Annenheim for the shortest cable car commute.
One practical detail: the Kanzelbahn cable car in Annenheim closes at 4:30 PM, so valley-based families need to time their last run accordingly. Free parking at the Kanzelbahn base station makes the daily commute painless, and the lakeside setting means summer-style evening walks along Ossiacher See are a genuine bonus for kids who are done with skiing by 3 PM.
How Much Are Lift Tickets?
The child day ticket at โฌ35 against the โฌ69.50 adult rate is a better ratio than most Austrian resorts, but the real savings are hiding in the group and school structures, not in standard pricing.
- Group rate lever: Book as a group of 20+ and adult tickets drop to โฌ60, youth to โฌ45, child half-day to โฌ27. Two or three families travelling together can hit this threshold easily, coordinate before you arrive.
- Free ticket threshold: Every 19 tickets purchased earns one free. With a group of four families buying six-day passes, you're well past 19. That's a free adult pass worth โฌ69.50.
- School rate: If your trip is organised through school, day tickets drop to โฌ25.50 (S1 tariff) with official school confirmation, 27% below the standard child rate.
- Cross-border bonus: Your Gerlitzen lift pass covers two additional resorts in Italy and Slovenia as part of the Villach ski mountains system. That's variety on a wind-closure day without paying extra.
- On-mountain dining. The 14 huts are described as reasonably priced by Austrian standards, but four lunches for a family of four still compounds. Pack sandwiches at least two days out of six.
- Under-6 check: Verify the current age threshold for free children's passes directly with the resort, Austrian resorts typically offer free passes for under-6s, but we don't have confirmed data for Gerlitzen's specific policy.
Planning Your Trip
โ๏ธHow Do You Get to Gerlitzen?
Klagenfurt Airport to the Annenheim valley station takes 45 minutes on the A10/A11 autobahn, no mountain passes, no switchbacks, no white-knuckle moments with sleeping children in the back seat.
- Best airport: Klagenfurt (~45 mins). Ryanair and Eurowings serve it from several UK and European cities. Ljubljana Airport is 90 minutes and sometimes cheaper for flights from the UK, factor in the longer transfer before assuming it's a deal.
- Transfer reality: No resort shuttle from either airport. You'll need a rental car or pre-booked private transfer. The motorway drive is straightforward even in winter conditions.
- Train option: Villach Hauptbahnhof is the nearest mainline station, 20 minutes by car or local bus to Annenheim. Workable if you're arriving from elsewhere in Austria.
- Parking: The Annenheim valley station has a new three-storey parking deck with 188 spaces, part of a recent โฌ5 million infrastructure investment. Free shuttle buses run from overflow parking lots nearby. Arrive before 9:30am during school holidays, the deck fills.
- Alternative access: Drive up from Treffen or Bodensdorf on the north side, or use the Klรถsterlebahn valley station via Arriach. Both bypass the Kanzelbahn queue entirely, useful on peak Saturdays.
- The family move: If staying valley-side, build 15 minutes into your morning for the Kanzelbahn cable car queue. It's rarely terrible, but with small children, "rarely" still stings when it happens.

โWhat's There to Do Off the Slopes?
Gerlitzen is not an aprรจs-ski resort, and if you have young children, that's a feature, not a bug.
The mountain empties by 4pm. There's no thumping bar scene to navigate around bedtimes, no beery crowds stumbling past your pushchair. Families staying at Feuerberg eat at the hotel; valley-based families head into Villach (20 minutes) for more restaurant choice and a proper evening out.
- Best warm-up stop: Seppl Hut at the Birkenhof slope, with deck chairs in the afternoon sun and traditional Jause, Carinthian cold cuts, dark bread, and mountain cheese. This is the Austrian hut experience at its most unhurried.
- Mid-mountain curiosity: Pรถllinger Hut has an adjacent mountain museum that gives non-skiing family members or tired legs something to do between runs.
- Summit view: Gipfelhaus Gerlitzen at 1,911m offers a panorama across Ossiacher Lake and the Karawanks range toward Slovenia. On a clear day, this view alone justifies the cable car ride.
- Evening reality: Limited dining options on-mountain. Villach is your best bet for a proper family dinner, it's a real Carinthian city with restaurants, gelato shops, and a pedestrian old town.
- The memory moment: Your child standing at 1,911m, pointing across a lake toward a different country, asking if they can ski there. That's the one they'll tell their friends about.
Carinthia's identity is built around its lakes, Ossiacher See, Wรถrthersee, Millstรคtter See, and Austrian families often treat a ski trip here as part of a broader regional visit. A non-skiing day at the lakeside or in Villach doesn't feel like a concession; it feels like the rest of the holiday.

When to Go
Season at a glance โ 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.
The Bottom Line
Would we recommend Gerlitzen?
What It Actually Costs
A family of four (two adults, two children under 15) pays EUR 209 per day in lift tickets at standard rates. Equipment rental runs EUR 25 to 35/day for adults, EUR 15 to 20 for kids.
That is not cheap for a smaller resort, but it is roughly EUR 40 to 60 less per day than Tyrolean equivalents like Ellmau in the SkiWelt.
- Budget family week (6 ski days): Valley apartment in Annenheim at EUR 70 to 90/night, self-catering with packed lunches. Six-day family passes: approximately EUR 1,250. Equipment rental: EUR 200. Total before flights: EUR 2,200 to 2,500.
- Comfort family week: Feuerberg on-mountain hotel, half-board at EUR 136/night, equipment rental on-site. Accommodation EUR 950+. Total before flights: EUR 3,000 to 3,500.
Compare to Bad Kleinkirchheim (EUR 2,500 to 3,200/week, similar terrain scale) or Nassfeld (EUR 2,000 to 2,800/week, more terrain but longer transfer from Klagenfurt). Gerlitzen offers the shortest transfer in Carinthia at 20 minutes from Villach station.
Your smartest money move: Group bookings. If you travel with another family and pool to 20+ tickets, the adult rate drops from EUR 69.50 to EUR 60, saving each adult roughly EUR 57 over a six-day trip. That is a family dinner in Villach, free.Second lever: Annenheim valley apartments are half the price of on-mountain Feuerberg, and the Kanzelbahn cable car from the valley takes 8 minutes.
The Honest Tradeoffs
Two black runs and a small terrain park. If your group includes anyone who skis strong reds or blacks confidently, Gerlitzen will bore them within 48 hours. The terrain park has kickers, rails, and boxes but is consistently too small for experienced riders.
Wind and fog close the upper lifts more often than you would like. When they do, 51km of skiing compresses onto lower slopes, queues spike, and the family-friendly atmosphere thins. On a full wind-hold day, this mountain feels very small.
On wind-hold days, Villach is 20 minutes by car with swimming pools, a proper town centre, and restaurants where lunch costs half the mountain price.
Would we recommend Gerlitzen?
Book Gerlitzen if your youngest is between 3 and 8, nobody in the group needs challenging terrain, and you want the most structured beginner experience in southern Austria. Three geographically separated Snow Bear Worlds mean your children aren't crammed into a single crowded practice zone, each has its own magic carpets, instructors, and space to fall over without an audience.
Don't book it if your teenager already skis reds confidently or if you want serious aprรจs-ski. They'll be climbing the walls by Wednesday.
Booking sequence: ski school at Feuerberg first (it fills fastest during peak weeks), then accommodation, then flights into Klagenfurt. Total planning time: one evening after the kids are in bed.
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Transparency note: This content was created with AI assistance and reviewed by Tom Meredith, our editor. Prices, dates, and availability may change. We recommend confirming details directly with the resort before booking.