Morgins, Switzerland: Family Ski Guide
Six kids per class, 42% beginner runs, one massive circuit.
Last updated: June 2026

Switzerland
Morgins
Book in Morgins village and buy a Portes du Soleil pass. If you want a livelier Swiss village, Champery has more character. If you want the best terrain in the Portes du Soleil, the French side (Avoriaz Morzine) has more variety. For a different Swiss experience entirely, Laax or Adelboden-Lenk are in different regions with different characters. Book a family apartment in Morgins village and buy the Portes du Soleil multi-day pass for full 580km network access. The village has a Migros Take Away for affordable quick meals. Avoid February French school holidays. Geneva airport (90 minutes) is the best gateway. The village cross-country trails are free and excellent for beginners.
Is Morgins Good for Families?
Morgins is the Swiss entry point to the Portes du Soleil, one of the world's biggest linked ski areas (600+ km across Switzerland and France). The village is small, traditional, and far quieter than Champery or the French side. If your family wants access to a massive ski area from a calm Swiss base, Morgins delivers.
Less famous than Champery, less crowded than Avoriaz, and the cross-border skiing is a genuine adventure for kids.
Morgins is a small, quiet village: families wanting lively après-ski, a broad entertainment programme, or steep challenging terrain for mixed-ability groups will feel under-served.
Biggest tradeoff
What's the Skiing Like for Families?
The learning progression at Morgins is unusually well-structured for a village this size.
Children aged 3-5 start in the Jardin des Neiges (Snow Garden), located at the ESS Morgins meeting point near the base of the main gondola. The snow garden uses magic carpets and a gentle enclosed area where the smallest skiers learn snowplough stops and basic balance without crossing paths with faster traffic.
Groups in the Jardin des Neiges are capped at six children, confirmed on the ESS Morgins booking platform, which means your three-year-old gets something closer to semi-private instruction at group-lesson pricing. For context, most French resorts in the Portes du Soleil run groups of 10-12 at the same age level.
Children who can already brake and turn progress to the P'tits Cracks class, still within the beginner area, before moving into the colour-coded League system: Blue League for confident beginners, Red and Black League for stronger young skiers who depart from the first floor of the Foilleuse gondola and start exploring the mountain's wider blue and red runs.
That beginner area deserves specific attention. The Snowli and Géant lifts serve a dedicated zone where learners practise without crossing into the main ski traffic. A day pass covering just these two lifts costs CHF 10, but only when presented alongside an ESS lesson ticket.
This matters for first-time families: a non-skiing parent supervising a child's first afternoon on snow pays almost nothing for lift access instead of the full CHF 72.
For English-speaking families worried about language barriers in ski school, SnowPros has operated as an independent English-medium ski school in Morgins since 2018, offering both private and group lessons.
Their positioning is specifically aimed at British and international visitors, useful if your four-year-old is unlikely to follow instructions in French.
The wider Morgins terrain suits progressing beginners and early intermediates. Forty-two percent of slopes are green or beginner-classified, and the longest run stretches 6km, enough distance to build confidence without the intimidation of a steep, narrow piste. The highest lift reaches 2,470m, giving reasonable snow reliability for a lower-altitude Swiss resort.
Where Morgins runs out of mountain: advanced skiers will exhaust the local red runs within a day or two. Stronger skiers in mixed-ability families should budget for the full Portes du Soleil pass and plan to ski toward Les Crosets or across into Châtel for steeper terrain.

📊The Numbers
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Family Score | 6.6Good |
Best Age Range | 3–14 years |
Kid-Friendly Terrain | 42%Above average |
Ski School Min Age | 3 years † |
Kids Ski Free | — |
Score Breakdown
Value for Money
Convenience
Things to Do
Parent Experience
Childcare & Learning
Planning Your Trip
🏠Where Should Your Family Stay?
Accommodation data for Morgins is limited in current research, and we want to be upfront about that: we don't have verified pricing for specific properties, and no major hotel chains operate in the village. What we can tell you is the shape of the market.
Morgins is predominantly self-catered apartments and private chalets. Platforms like OVO Network and standard Swiss holiday rental sites list properties across the village. The gondola departs from the village centre, which means most accommodation is within a reasonable walk of the main lift, though ski-in/ski-out access is not confirmed for any specific property.
The village's residential character means you're renting in a place where people actually live year-round. Expect functional Swiss apartments rather than resort-polished hotel rooms. For families with young children, this is often preferable: a kitchen, a washing machine, and a living room with space to spread out after a half-day on snow.
Our recommendation: contact the Morgins tourist office directly for current availability and pricing, or search OVO Network and Interhome for chalet listings with family filters. Book early for February half-term weeks, supply in a village this small tightens fast. Morgins sits less than 2 km from the French border, and the neighbouring village of Chatel has larger supermarkets with noticeably lower prices than Swiss shops. A quick cross-border grocery run on arrival day can cut your weekly food bill by 30-40%.
How Much Are Lift Tickets?
The layered pass system at Morgins is where families can make real savings, but you need to understand the tiers.
The full Portes du Soleil pass (CHF 72 adult, CHF 54 child per day) unlocks the entire 600km circuit across both countries. Families of four or more receive a 10% discount, dropping those figures to roughly CHF 65 and CHF 49 per person per day.For a family of four skiing five days, that 10% saves approximately CHF 87 over the week.
If you won't leave the Swiss side, the 3CM pass (Champéry, Les Crosets, Morgins) costs CHF 10-16 less per person per day than the full circuit pass.
For a family of four over five days, choosing the 3CM pass over the full Portes du Soleil pass saves CHF 200-320, real money in Switzerland.
The sharpest tool: the CHF 10 beginner-area day pass covering the Snowli and Géant lifts, available with an ESS lesson ticket. On days when one parent stays with a learning child on the nursery slopes while the other skis, the supervising parent spends CHF 10 instead of CHF 72.Over two or three such days, that's CHF 124-186 saved for one adult alone.
Self-catering is the dominant accommodation model in Morgins, and for budget families this is the correct move.
Geneva airport is 90 minutes away, close enough that a rental car loaded with supermarket supplies from a Migros or Coop on the drive in eliminates several days of Swiss restaurant prices.
Planning Your Trip
✈️How Do You Get to Morgins?
Geneva airport is the standard arrival point, 90 minutes by car, making Morgins one of the closer Swiss ski villages to a major international hub. The drive follows the autoroute along the southern shore of Lac Léman before turning south into the Valais valley. In clear conditions it's straightforward; in snowfall, chains may be required for the final climb.
There is no train station in Morgins. The nearest rail connection is at Aigle, from which you'd need a bus or transfer for the final 30-odd minutes. For families with young children and equipment, this makes a direct car or transfer the practical choice.
Alps2Alps and several private operators run shared and dedicated transfers from Geneva to Morgins. Shared transfers typically cost less per head but add time for multiple resort drop-offs along the valley. A private transfer for a family of four runs faster but pricier, get quotes directly, as rates vary by season.
If you're driving from the French side, perhaps combining with a stay in Châtel or Morzine, the cross-border road access is straightforward, though you'll re-enter Swiss toll and currency territory. Parking in Morgins village is generally manageable given the village's small scale, but we don't have confirmed pricing for resort parking.
One logistical note: all spending in Morgins is in Swiss francs. If you ski into France during the day, café stops and mountain restaurants switch to euros. Carrying both currencies, or a card with low foreign-transaction fees, avoids the small annoyance of unfavourable on-mountain exchange rates.

☕What's There to Do Off the Slopes?
By mid-afternoon, Morgins empties out gently. There's no throbbing après-ski strip, no DJ playing at the base station. The gondola disgorges tired families, and the village absorbs them quietly. For parents of children under seven, this is the point: nobody is competing with your bedtime schedule.
The standout off-slope experience is the bird-of-prey aviary, where guided Harris hawk free-flight hikes let you walk through the valley with a trained raptor returning to the handler's glove overhead. Listed on the official Portes du Soleil resort page for Morgins, it's the kind of activity children remember years later, and it's unavailable at neighbouring villages.
Skijöring, being towed on skis behind a horse, is bookable as a Morgins-specific activity through the Portes du Soleil site. It's unusual even by Swiss resort standards and gives older children or adventurous parents a story that doesn't involve a chairlift.
Beyond these, the village is quiet. A walk along the Vieze River valley, a day trip to nearby Champéry for its more dramatic scenery, or, for families with a car and a rest day, the shore of Lac Léman is roughly an hour's drive.
Limited English-language reviews make it difficult to assess specific restaurant or café quality in the village, we're flagging this gap rather than guessing. The evening pace is slow, and families wanting entertainment beyond a board game and a bottle of Valais wine will feel the limits by Thursday.

When to Go
Season at a glance — color-coded by family score
💬What Do Other Parents Think?
What Parents Love
- The Portes du Soleil connection: Several parents mention the thrill when their older kids (usually 10+) realize they can ski to twelve different resorts from their base
What Parents Flag
- Weather dependency: Multiple reviews mention that Morgins' lower elevation means backup indoor activities become crucial when rain hits the village
- Limited evening options: Parents note that after 7 PM, entertainment essentially means hotel games or early bedtime
- Lift capacity: The most common surprise is weekend queues, particularly at the main gondola during Swiss school holidays
What families remember most is watching their children's faces when they realize the blue run they've been practicing on actually crosses an international border.
Families on the Slopes
(4 photos)Photos from Google Places. Posted by visitors.
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 Morgins?
What It Actually Costs
The Portes du Soleil six-day pass runs CHF 68/day adult, CHF 45/day child, covering 600km+ across 12 resorts in both Switzerland and France. That is extraordinary value per kilometer of terrain. Morgins accommodation starts at CHF 100/night for apartments, cheaper than most other Swiss-side Portes du Soleil villages.
A budget family in a self-catering apartment, eating lunch on the French side: plan CHF 3,200-4,000 for a week for four. The French-side mountain restaurants charge 20-30% less than Swiss prices for comparable food.
A comfortable family in a mid-range Swiss hotel, mixing French and Swiss dining: CHF 4,500-5,800. The two-country pricing arbitrage is a genuine advantage unique to this resort system.
Compare to Champéry (similar Portes du Soleil access, 15-20% more expensive, better village), Avoriaz on the French side (cheaper lodging but no car access), or Morzine (French side, 20-30% cheaper overall). Morgins gives you Swiss accommodation quality at near-French prices, with 600km of terrain on one pass.
Your smartest money move: Base in Morgins (Swiss quality accommodation), ski to the French side for lunch (French prices are 20-30% lower), and buy the full Portes du Soleil pass. Two pricing zones on one lift pass, genuine savings that no single-country resort can match.
The Honest Tradeoffs
If you want big terrain without the circuit navigation, Zermatt or Verbier are more self-contained Swiss options.
The lift connection to the Portes du Soleil circuit requires passing through Châtel, and the linking lifts close earlier than the main area. Day pass pricing for the full Portes du Soleil network runs CHF 65/adult, significantly more than the Morgins-only ticket.
The village has one small supermarket.
Not feeling it? A better fit might be Villars for a bigger Swiss resort with better family amenities.
Would we recommend Morgins?
Book in Morgins village and buy a Portes du Soleil pass. If you want a livelier Swiss village, Champery has more character. If you want the best terrain in the Portes du Soleil, the French side (Avoriaz Morzine) has more variety. For a different Swiss experience entirely, Laax or Adelboden-Lenk are in different regions with different characters.
Book a family apartment in Morgins village and buy the Portes du Soleil multi-day pass for full 580km network access. The village has a Migros Take Away for affordable quick meals. Avoid February French school holidays. Geneva airport (90 minutes) is the best gateway. The village cross-country trails are free and excellent for beginners.
Similar Resorts
Families who loved Morgins also enjoyed these
Crans-Montana
Davos-Klosters
Anzère
Nendaz
Grindelwald
Savognin
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.