Branäs, Sweden: Family Ski Guide
Ski-in/ski-out every cottage, mascots bring juice, under-7s ride free.
Last updated: April 2026

Sweden
Branäs
Book a cabin in the Branas resort area. If your family outgrows the terrain, Salen is nearby with more runs. Are is Sweden's biggest for a full-week destination. Trysil in Norway is Scandinavia's best all-around family resort. If you want gentler terrain in Finland, Levi has Lapland atmosphere. Book a cabin through Branas.se and buy multi-day passes for per-day savings. The February sportlov week is peak demand, book at least two months ahead. The SPAR in Sysslebäck (20 minutes) is the nearest full supermarket, so stock up before arriving. January temperatures drop below -15°C, so pack insulated layers for the kids.
Is Branäs Good for Families?
Branas is Sweden's most family-dedicated resort, purpose-built for kids. The terrain is gentle, the kids' areas are outstanding, and the whole place is designed around families with children under 10. Less terrain than Are, less cross-country than Salen, but more focused on young families than any other Scandinavian resort.
If your children are under 8 and you want a Swedish ski trip where everything is built for them, Branas is the pick.
Any adult in the group skis red or black runs regularly
Biggest tradeoff
What's the Skiing Like for Families?
Branäs is as close to a purpose-built learning machine as you'll find in Scandinavia. Sixty-five percent of the 23 km of runs are rated green, the two ski zones, Branäsberget and the gentler Dalen valley, are connected but distinct, and every lodge sits on the snow, so your child's first day doesn't begin with a terrifying car-park boot-walk.
The ski school, run by Bengt Martins, follows the Swedish principle of glädje joy first, technique second. Instructors aim to make children want to come back tomorrow, not to drill parallel turns into a sobbing five-year-old. Group lessons run 75 minutes each, with a three-session weekday block (Mon, Wed) priced at SEK 965 per child.
- First carpet: BjĂśrnbuseland is the dedicated beginner area with magic carpets, gentle gradients, and the BjĂśrnbusen mascot characters who show up five days a week dispensing juice and running games. Your four-year-old will think this is the entire holiday.
- First green run: Long, wide greens on Branäsberget let a child who's graduated from the carpet build confidence without suddenly confronting a steep pitch. A parent can ski alongside without feeling like they're tiptoeing.
- First blue run: The blue runs down both Branäsberget and Dalen are described as long and consistent, no surprise steeps mid-run. A progressing seven-year-old and an intermediate adult can lap the same piste together comfortably.
- First fun feature: Nintendo Land is a branded terrain playground for children, separate from BjĂśrnbuseland. It adds variety once the greens feel easy but the child isn't ready for open blues.
- First competition: The BjĂśrnbuse Cup runs four times per week, a timed race for children that gives returning families a measurable "I beat my time" progression year on year. The Airbag Open at Amundsbacken (twice weekly) lets older kids try jumps with a soft landing.
- The friction point: Swedish is the default language for ski school and on-slope signage. English is widely spoken among staff, but if your child is shy and monolingual English, check when booking whether the assigned group instructor is comfortable teaching in English. This isn't a dealbreaker, Swedes typically speak excellent English, but it's worth confirming in advance.
Evening snow-racing runs five nights per week across both Branäsberget and Dalen. That 19:00 lift closing time means families who need a slow morning, and every family with small children needs a slow morning, don't lose half their ski day.

Trail Map
Full CoverageTerrain by Difficulty
Š OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL
đThe Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Family Score | 7.1Good |
Best Age Range | 3â12 years |
Kid-Friendly Terrain | 84%Very beginner-friendly |
Ski School Min Age | â |
Kids Ski Free | â |
Local Terrain | 80 runs |
Score Breakdown
Value for Money
Convenience
Things to Do
Parent Experience
Childcare & Learning
Planning Your Trip
đŹWhat Do Other Parents Think?
Parents consistently describe Branäs as "the resort where my four-year-old actually wanted to ski every day." The Swedish approach of glädje over technique creates something rare: children begging to go back up the mountain instead of retreating to the lodge after one run.
What Parents Love
- BjĂśrnbuseland works magic "My twins went from pizza wedges to confident turns in three days on those magic carpets, and they never felt rushed or scared"
- Every lodge sits on snow "No terrifying boot-walks across icy car parks with a crying five-year-old. You literally ski to the door"
- Evening snow-racing under floodlights "Our eight-year-old talks about those night races more than anything else from the trip. The lifts running until 7pm changed everything"
- BjĂśrnbuse Cup creates genuine excitement "Kids get obsessed with beating their own times. We have three years of certificates on the fridge now"
What Parents Flag
- Après-ski expectations need adjusting "This isn't Austria. Children's après is scheduled programming, not spontaneous bar culture"
- Limited terrain for confident skiers "If your ten-year-old is already parallel turning, they'll outgrow this place in two days"
- Very quiet evenings "By 8pm, everything shuts down. Bring books and board games"
The moment families remember most: watching their child's face during that first successful magic carpet ride in BjĂśrnbuseland, when they realize skiing isn't scary but actually fun. Several parents mention their kids drawing pictures of that yellow bear mascot for months afterward.
Families on the Slopes
(8 photos)Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.
đ Where Should Your Family Stay?
Book through branas.se for bundled packages, it's the only way to guarantee you're getting the lift-pass and ski-school discount, and every unit on the site is confirmed ski-in/ski-out.
Swedish families overwhelmingly stay in self-catering stugor (cottages). This isn't a budget compromise; it's the cultural norm. The cottage kitchen, the shared sauna, the kids asleep upstairs while you drink wine in the living room, that is the Swedish ski holiday. Branäs leans into this completely.
- Best convenience, Soltorget area: The central hub. Closest to the main lifts, the ski school meeting point, and the children's après-ski programme. If your kids are under six and you want to minimise every logistical step, this is the pick. Expect the highest demand during Swedish school holiday weeks (sportlov, typically weeks 7-10).
- Best for space, Solbacken: Slightly more spread out, with larger cottage options for families who need room. Still ski-in/ski-out. Playrooms are scattered across the resort, so you won't be far from one regardless of which area you book.
- Newer builds, Illern: The newest cottages at Branäs, with more modern finishes. The tradeoff: Illern sits slightly further from the Soltorget hub, so on day one, before anyone can ski, you may need to drive to the base area. Once your family is on skis, the ski-in/ski-out access works as advertised.
We don't have confirmed accommodation pricing from our research. Rates vary significantly by week, cottage size, and whether you book a package or lodging-only. Check branas.se directly for current availability, Swedish school holiday weeks sell out months in advance.
One detail that matters: ski storage is available at the lodgings. You won't be hauling four sets of rental boots across a car park each morning.
How Much Are Lift Tickets?
Branäs is mid-range by European standards, but the free under-7 policy and the bundled package structure mean families with young children pay materially less here than at comparable Scandinavian resorts.
- Under-7 free skiing: Children under 7 ride every lift for free, but you need a physical pass card, which costs SEK 55. Budget families with two small kids save over SEK 800/day versus paying child rates.
- Keycard system: Branäs uses Skidata keycards that can be loaded online before arrival. Do this. It eliminates the ticket-office queue on your first morning when everyone is tired from the drive.
- Ski school in bulk: The three-session weekday block (Mon, Wed, 75 min each) costs SEK 965 per child, that's SEK 322 per lesson. Weekend pairs cost SEK 720 for two sessions. Weekday blocks are better value per hour.
- Private lessons scale down: Private lessons start from SEK 495 per person when you book a group of four. Two families splitting a private instructor is the move if your children are similar ages.
- Self-cater aggressively: Stock up at the ICA in Ludvika on the drive in. We don't have confirmed meal pricing at the resort, but Swedish on-mountain dining is rarely cheap. A cottage kitchen is your biggest budget lever after the free under-7 pass.
- Rental off-site: RentSki's SKIBRANAS code saves 10% on equipment 30 km south of the resort. For a family of four renting full kits, that discount adds up to a meaningful saving versus resort-based rental pricing.
Planning Your Trip
âď¸How Do You Get to Branäs?
Drive. Branäs is in Norra Värmland with no direct train service, so a rental car from either Stockholm Arlanda or Oslo Gardermoen is the realistic play for international families.
- From Stockholm Arlanda: 5.5 hours by car. The route is straightforward motorway and well-maintained winter roads. Budget the full day for travel, you won't arrive with energy to ski.
- From Oslo Gardermoen: Slightly shorter drive and often cheaper flights from the UK and continental Europe. Check both airports when booking, the fare difference can fund a day's lift passes.
- Road-trip stop, Ludvika: On the Stockholm route, Ludvika has a large ICA supermarket for loading up on self-catering supplies and a Sybilla for road-trip burgers. Stop here rather than paying resort-area grocery prices.
- Ski rental: RentSki is located 30 km south of the resort. Use code SKIBRANAS for 10% off. They stock beginner through advanced gear including snowboards and cross-country skis. Factor this stop into your drive, it's on the approach road, not a detour.
- Winter driving note: Studded or friction winter tyres are legally required in Sweden from 1 December to 31 March. Rental cars from major airports come equipped, but confirm when booking.
Free electric vehicle charging stations are available in the resort parking area, a useful perk if renting an EV from Stockholm.

âWhat's There to Do Off the Slopes?
Branäs after skiing is quiet, structured, and in reality child-inclusive, don't come expecting a village with bars and boutiques.
Swedish après-ski culture at a family resort looks nothing like its Austrian equivalent. Children's après-ski is a scheduled programme running four times per week, and it's a proper organised event, not a token colouring table in the corner of a bar.
- Evening snow-racing: The single best after-dinner activity. Runs five nights per week on both Branäsberget and Dalen under floodlights, with the lifts open until 19:00. Your eight-year-old will talk about this more than the daytime skiing.
- BjĂśrnbuse Cup: A timed children's race held four times weekly. Returning families use it as a progress marker, kids compete against their own times from previous trips.
- Airbag Open: Twice weekly at Amundsbacken. Older children (and brave parents) can try jumps with an airbag landing. It's a controlled thrill that gives teens something to do when the blues feel too easy.
- Playrooms: Multiple locations across the resort. When it's minus fifteen and your toddler has hit the wall, these are essential. They're warm, they're free, and they're within walking distance of every accommodation zone.
- Groceries and dining: We don't have confirmed restaurant names or grocery store details at the resort. Most families self-cater in their cottages. If you stocked up in Ludvika, you're set.
The honest evening picture: you'll cook dinner in your cottage, the kids will collapse by 19:30, and you'll sit by a window watching snow fall on pine forest. That's the product. If you need nightlife, this is the wrong resort.

When to Go
Season at a glance â 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 Branäs?
What It Actually Costs
The family focus means kids' activities are well-priced and often bundled into accommodation packages at 15-20% savings.
A budget family of four skiing five days in a cabin with kitchen: plan SEK 18,000-24,000 (~EUR 1,550-2,100). That is among the cheapest ski weeks in Scandinavia. Branäs is drivable from Gothenburg and Oslo, eliminating flight costs entirely.
A comfortable family in a larger cabin with some restaurant dining: SEK 25,000-32,000 (~EUR 2,200-2,800). The kids' areas and family programming add value that the modest terrain statistics undersell.
Compare to Sälen (SEK 22,000-30,000/week, more terrain, drivable from Stockholm), Hundfjället (similar pricing, better kids' programs), or à re (SEK 30,000-40,000/week, 50%+ more expensive). Branäs wins on pure family value: low costs, strong kids' infrastructure, and no-fuss cabin holidays.
Your smartest money move: Book a cabin package that bundles lift passes and kids' activities, typically 15-20% cheaper than buying separately. Drive from Gothenburg or Oslo to eliminate flights. Cook most meals in the cabin to keep the weekly total under SEK 20,000.
The Honest Tradeoffs
This is a dedicated family bubble, which is perfect for its audience and boring for everyone else.
The 4-hour drive from Stockholm or 3 hours from Gothenburg means most families arrive tired. Midweek the resort is extremely quiet, which is peaceful or boring depending on your family.
If this resort is not the right fit for your family, consider Klappen for a purpose-built family resort nearby with a similar focus.
If this resort is right for your family, you have done the hardest part: the research.
Would we recommend Branäs?
Book a cabin in the Branas resort area. If your family outgrows the terrain, Salen is nearby with more runs. Are is Sweden's biggest for a full-week destination. Trysil in Norway is Scandinavia's best all-around family resort. If you want gentler terrain in Finland, Levi has Lapland atmosphere. Book a cabin through Branas.se and buy multi-day passes for per-day savings.
The February sportlov week is peak demand, book at least two months ahead. The SPAR in Sysslebäck (20 minutes) is the nearest full supermarket, so stock up before arriving. January temperatures drop below -15°C, so pack insulated layers for the kids.
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Transparency note: This content was created with AI assistance and reviewed by our editorial team. Prices, dates, and availability may change. We recommend confirming details directly with the resort before booking.