Savognin, Switzerland: Family Ski Guide
CHF 8 lifts for your six-year-old. Romansh Switzerland. No queues.

Is Savognin Good for Families?
Book Savognin if your children are under ten, your budget matters, and you want a real Swiss mountain village rather than a resort engineered for Instagram. The certified family infrastructure, the CHF 8 Flurin Child ticket, and the unhurried Romansh valley atmosphere make this one of the strongest value propositions in Graubünden for young families, first-timers especially. Do not book Savognin if your family includes confident intermediate-to-advanced skiers who need more than four days of varied terrain, or if you require verified English-language childcare for non-skiing toddlers. Your next step: check Ferienwohnung availability through the Savognin Tourismus website for mid-January (historically the snowiest month at 51cm average), book lift passes early to lock in the lowest dynamic pricing, and confirm ski school details directly with the resort before you commit.
Is Savognin Good for Families?
The postbus from Chur climbs through a narrow gorge, crosses the River Gelgia, and drops you at a cable car station with the car park right beside it. No grand entrance. No queues. Just a compact village stretched along the valley floor beneath wide, sun-lit slopes, a church spire poking above wooden-fronted buildings, and a quiet that feels earned rather than empty.
Savognin is Switzerland's most affordable serious family ski resort, a place where a children's day pass costs CHF 8, the slopes carry an externally certified 'Family Destination' quality seal, and the village still speaks Romansh as a first language. If your kids are under ten and you've been priced out of Graubünden, start here.
FAMILY SCORE: 6.3/10
How we arrive at this: we weight six factors, beginner terrain and ski school quality, childcare availability, village walkability, value for money, off-slope family activities, and lift system accessibility for young children.
Savognin scores highest on value (the Flurin Child day ticket at CHF 8 for ages 6-9 is among the lowest in Switzerland, and under-6s ski free) and on its dedicated Kinderland learning area, which anchors the resort's certified family credentials. Village walkability is strong, the cable car station, accommodation, and sleigh rides cluster within a short distance. Beginner terrain scores well on width and gentleness but loses a point due to visitor reports of inconsistent piste signage, a real concern for first-time families navigating alone. Childcare availability pulls the score down: while Kinderland is confirmed, we lack verified data on crèche facilities for non-skiing toddlers, a gap that prevents a higher rating. The lift system is modern enough for a resort this size but at 12 lifts across 73.5km, throughput ceiling matters less than coverage. Ski school quality data is sparse in English-language sources, so we score it conservatively.
A 7 means: a strong choice for the right family, with specific limitations you should understand before booking.
THE NUMBERS
Costs (CHF, 2025/26 season, dynamic pricing, buy early for lower rates): - Adult day pass: from CHF 52 - Youth day pass (16-19): CHF 47 - Child day pass (10-15): CHF 28.50 - Flurin Child day pass (6-9): CHF 8 - Under 6: Free - Mid-range accommodation: approximately CHF 225/night
Terrain: - Total pistes: 73.5km - Lifts: 12 - Trails: 24 - Base altitude: 1,200m - Summit altitude: 2,713m - Vertical drop: 1,513m - Average annual snowfall: 141cm (January average: 51cm)
Logistics: - Location: Val Surses, Graubünden, eastern Switzerland - Nearest city: Chur (~45 min by car) - Parking: Directly at cable car station - Currency: CHF - FIS-sanctioned slalom venue
WHO SHOULD BOOK THIS
First-time families with children under 10. Savognin's dedicated Kinderland learning area and its certified 'Family Destination' quality seal, earned through documented investment, not self-applied branding, exist precisely for families like Mia and James who need to know the infrastructure is real before they commit. The slopes are quiet, the village is small enough that you won't lose your bearings, and a CHF 8 children's day pass means a failed first day on skis doesn't sting financially. The caveat: some pistes have drawn criticism for insufficient signage, so stick to the marked beginner areas and don't freelance your route until you're confident. Confirm lesson availability and minimum ages directly with the ski school before booking, English-language information online is limited.
Budget-conscious families who want Switzerland without the Swiss price tag. The Kowalskis will find Savognin's lift pass structure meaningfully cheaper than Arosa Lenzerheide or St Moritz, both within an hour's drive. Two adults and two children aged 6-9 pay CHF 120 total per day for lift access. Self-catering apartments (Ferienwohnungen) are the local norm, not a compromise, and they'll cut your food bill in half. The caveat: some mountain restaurants are cash-only, so carry Swiss Francs or risk an awkward moment at the till.
Mixed-ability families where the split matters. The Chens can use Martignas peak as their natural meeting point, Dad and the teen access steeper terrain from the top while Mum consolidates on wide intermediate runs, and everyone converges for lunch. The 73.5km is enough to hold an advanced skier's interest for four or five days, though not much longer. The caveat: the toddler question is harder to answer. Kinderland is confirmed, but we don't have verified data on dedicated non-skiing childcare for under-3s. Check directly with the resort before you commit.
At 73.5km with 12 lifts, the ski area is too compact for intermediate-to-advanced families who would exhaust the terrain within three or four days.
Biggest tradeoff
Limited data
13 data pts
Perfect if...
- An officially certified 'Family Destination' quality seal, dedicated Kinderland learning area, and a Flurin Child day ticket for just CHF 8 (ages 6-9) make Savognin the most compelling affordable-authentic Swiss family ski resort outside the major circuits.
Maybe skip if...
- At 73.5km with 12 lifts, the ski area is too compact for intermediate-to-advanced families who would exhaust the terrain within three or four days.
⛷️What’s the Skiing Like for Families?
Savognin's 73.5km won't overwhelm anyone, and that's the point. The ski area climbs from 1,200m at the village base to 2,713m at the summit, a 1,513m vertical drop that's quietly impressive for a resort this size. Twelve lifts serve 24 trails, and on most days, you'll share them with a fraction of the crowds you'd find at Lenzerheide or Arosa.
The mountain has two distinct personalities. Martignas peak is the hub, ride the cable car from the base station and you access the widest variety of terrain, from broad cruising runs that suit improving intermediates to steeper descents that justify Savognin's status as an FIS-sanctioned slalom venue. International race events run here, which tells you the gradient is real. For a family morning, ride to Martignas, ski the wide runs together, then split: confident skiers push toward the steeper lines while beginners drop back to the lower slopes. Martignas functions as a natural regrouping point.
Then there's Radons. This is a formally designated tranquil skiing zone, mapped and named, not just a marketing adjective. The runs here are gentler, the pace slower, the sun terraces more inviting. It's where you take a five-year-old who's just found their snowplough, or where you go on day four when your legs want easy turns and a long coffee.
Both names, Martignas, Radons, are Romansh, a small reminder that you're skiing through a living linguistic landscape older than most European nation-states.
One warning: visitor reviews flag inconsistent piste signage on certain routes. Agree on a meeting point and a route plan before splitting up, especially with children navigating independently for the first time.

🏠Where Should Your Family Stay?
The dominant accommodation style in Savognin, and across Graubünden, is the Ferienwohnung: a self-catering holiday apartment, typically within a residential building, with a kitchen, living area, and one or two bedrooms. This isn't a budget workaround. It's how Swiss families holiday in the mountains, and in Savognin it's the most practical option. Family travel reviews consistently praise these apartments for space, independence, and the ability to manage small children's meal and sleep schedules without restaurant logistics.
Mid-range apartments run approximately CHF 225 per night based on available data. Budget options exist but we lack confirmed pricing, expect to find simpler apartments from around CHF 130-160 per night through local booking platforms.
We don't have verified names for specific properties. When searching, prioritise apartments in the village centre near the cable car base station, the village is narrow and elongated along the valley floor, so proximity to the lifts matters more here than in a compact resort. At least one of the main family-oriented hotels sits directly opposite farmer Giatgen Arpagaus's stable, meaning sleigh rides are literally across the road.
One practical detail: car parking is at the cable car station itself. If you're driving, you won't need a shuttle, the village's scale means the walk from most central apartments to the lifts is short and flat.
Look for properties advertising "familienfreundlich" (family-friendly) on Swiss booking platforms like Interhome or directly through the Savognin tourism office, which can match you to apartments based on your family's configuration.
🎟️How Much Do Lift Tickets Cost at Savognin?
Savognin's lift pass pricing is where the resort makes its sharpest argument. The headline: a Flurin Child day ticket for ages 6-9 costs CHF 8. The name comes from Romansh children's literature, a small cultural touch that signals how deliberately this resort courts young families. Children under 6 ski free.
For a family of four with two children aged 7 and 9, daily lift access costs CHF 120 total (two adults at CHF 52, two Flurin passes at CHF 8). Compare that to Arosa Lenzerheide, where an adult day pass alone starts above CHF 70, and the arithmetic becomes obvious.
The resort uses dynamic pricing, tickets bought further in advance will sit at the lower end of the published range. That CHF 52 adult day pass is the starting price for 2025/26; buying the day before could cost more. Check the resort website and buy as early as your plans allow.
We don't have confirmed data on multi-day passes or family bundle deals. This is a gap worth investigating directly with the resort, as multi-day discounts could reduce the adult price meaningfully over a five- or six-day trip.
Three specific cost-saving moves that work here: first, self-cater in a Ferienwohnung and pack lunches for the mountain, mountain restaurants are cash-only at some locations, and Swiss restaurant prices add up fast. Second, book lift passes online as early as possible to lock in the lowest dynamic rate. Third, if your children are aged 6-9, the Flurin ticket alone saves you CHF 20 per child per day compared to the standard child rate, over five days, that's CHF 200 back in your pocket for two kids.
✈️How Do You Get to Savognin?
Most families will fly into Zurich, Switzerland's main international airport. From there, Savognin is approximately two and a half hours by car, southeast on the A3 and A13 motorways, then climbing into the Val Surses valley via the road toward the Julier Pass. Families driving in winter should carry snow chains; the final stretch into the valley is well-maintained but Alpine.
The drive itself earns a moment of attention. The road follows the route of the Julier Pass, one of the key Alpine crossings since Roman times. Your kids probably won't care about second-century trade routes, but you might appreciate knowing you're following a road that's been in continuous use for two thousand years.
By train, the journey runs through Chur, the capital of Graubünden and the oldest city in Switzerland, with a connection by postbus into Val Surses. Chur is 45 minutes from Savognin by road. The Swiss rail network is reliable and scenic, and for families without a car, the postbus connection means you can manage without one, though you'll sacrifice flexibility for day trips.
Once in Savognin, you don't need a car for daily skiing. Parking sits directly at the cable car base station, and the village is walkable end to end. If you're comparing this to the transfer logistics of flying into Samedan for St Moritz (which requires either a car or a slow rail connection), Savognin is simpler to reach and easier to navigate on arrival.
No confirmed data on airport transfer services or costs, check with your accommodation provider, as many Graubünden properties arrange shared transfers from Zurich or Chur.

☕What Can You Do Off the Slopes?
The standout non-ski activity is a horse-drawn sleigh ride through the valley with farmer Giatgen Arpagaus, whose stable sits directly opposite one of the main family hotels in the village centre. This isn't a commercial tourism operation, it's a working farmer with a sleigh, and the distinction matters. Suitable for all ages, including toddlers bundled on a parent's lap.
Cross-country skiing tracks run along the River Gelgia through the valley floor, a quiet option for parents who want exercise without chairlifts. Kinderland doubles as a play area for younger children taking a day off the slopes.
We don't have confirmed pricing for sleigh rides, check directly at the stable.
Graubünden's mountain food tradition is distinct from what you'll find in the German- or French-speaking cantons. Two dishes to look for: capuns, chard leaves wrapped around a filling of dried meat, herbs, and Spätzle dough, then baked in cream, and maluns, a slow-fried potato-and-flour dish served with apple sauce and alpine cheese. Both are hearty, unfussy, and appeal to children who eat potatoes happily.
We don't have confirmed names for specific mountain restaurants in Savognin. What we do know: at least some Hütte restaurants on the mountain are cash-only. Carry Swiss Francs. This is not a resort where you can tap your way through lunch.
At four in the afternoon, Savognin is quiet in a way that feels intentional rather than dead. Children are still playing in the Kinderland area or being pulled on sleds along the flat stretch near Lai Barnagn, a small, clear lake that sits at the village's heart, frozen in winter and ringed by a path that parents walk slowly while their kids run ahead. The River Gelgia murmurs underneath its ice somewhere below the main road. A horse-drawn sleigh passes with a soft jingle, heading back toward Giatgen Arpagaus's stable.
This is not a resort with a lively après scene. There's no thumping umbrella bar, no DJ, no queue of sunburned twenty-somethings ordering Jägerbombs. If that's what you want, you're forty-five minutes from St Moritz.
What Savognin has instead is a village that still functions as a village. The signage is in Romansh, Sursilvan Romansh, to be precise, a Rhaeto-Romance language that predates medieval German settlement and is still the daily working language for many locals here. You'll see it on shop fronts, hear it between neighbours, notice it on the trail maps. Val Surses is one of the few places in Europe where a pre-Roman language survives as a living community tongue, not a museum exhibit.
The atmosphere suits families with young children who want their evenings calm, their mornings unhurried, and their hot chocolate served without a side of overstimulation. The village's 'Family Destination' quality seal, awarded externally by the regional tourism authority, reflects this ethos: infrastructure designed around families, maintained with the quiet consistency of a community that takes the designation seriously.

When to Go
Snow conditions, crowd levels, and family scores by month
| Month | Snow | Crowds | Family Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Dec | Good | Busy | 6 | Christmas holidays bring crowds; early season snow variable, snowmaking essential. |
JanBest | Great | Moderate | 8 | Post-holiday crowds ease; Graubünden typically receives good January snowfall. |
Feb | Great | Busy | 7 | European school holidays create crowds but reliable snow base and conditions. |
Mar | Great | Quiet | 8 | Spring snow quality excellent; fewer families means shorter lift lines and better value. |
Apr | Okay | Moderate | 4 | Season winds down; spring sun softens snow and Easter holidays increase crowds. |
Family score considers snow quality, crowd levels, pricing, and school holidays.
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
Our honest take on Savognin
What It Actually Costs
Here's what a week at Savognin actually costs for a family of four, two adults, two children aged 7 and 9, across five skiing days and six nights. We've used confirmed pricing where available and clearly marked estimates.
SCENARIO A: THE BUDGET WEEK
Lift passes (5 days): 2 adults × CHF 52 × 5 = CHF 520. 2 Flurin Child passes × CHF 8 × 5 = CHF 80. Total: CHF 600. Accommodation (6 nights, budget self-catering apartment): Estimated CHF 150/night = CHF 900. (Mid-range confirmed at ~CHF 225; budget apartments are available but unconfirmed in our data.) Equipment rental (5 days, full family): We don't have Savognin-specific rental pricing. Based on typical Swiss resort rates, estimate CHF 150-180 per adult and CHF 80-100 per child = approximately CHF 500. Meals (self-catering with 2 restaurant dinners): Groceries approximately CHF 250 (Swiss supermarket prices are high). Two family dinners out at approximately CHF 70 each = CHF 140. Mountain snacks carried from apartment. Total: approximately CHF 390. Ski school (2 half-days, group lessons, both children): No confirmed pricing. Estimated at CHF 70 per child per half-day = CHF 280.
SCENARIO A TOTAL: approximately CHF 2,670
SCENARIO B: THE COMFORTABLE WEEK
Lift passes: Same CHF 600. Dynamic pricing doesn't change with your hotel choice. Accommodation (6 nights, mid-range apartment): CHF 225/night = CHF 1,350. Equipment rental (5 days, premium tier): Estimated CHF 200 per adult, CHF 120 per child = CHF 640. Meals (eating out for lunch and dinner most days): Mountain lunches CHF 40/day × 5 = CHF 200. Dinners out CHF 80/day × 5 = CHF 400. Breakfasts self-catered CHF 100. Total: approximately CHF 700. Ski school (2 half-days group + 1 private lesson for one child): Group lessons CHF 280 (as above) + 1 private lesson estimated at CHF 200 = CHF 480.
SCENARIO B TOTAL: approximately CHF 3,770
THE GAP: roughly CHF 1,100.
That gap is almost entirely accommodation and food. The lift passes, the one cost you can't negotiate around, are identical, and at CHF 600 for a family of four for five days, they're among the lowest in Graubünden. For comparison, five days of family lift access at Arosa Lenzerheide would cost meaningfully more for adults alone, before adding children's passes.
The Kowalskis should note: the single biggest lever is self-catering. A kitchen in your Ferienwohnung and a visit to a Chur supermarket on the way in could save CHF 300-400 across the week. Pack mountain lunches. Carry cash for the Hütten that don't take cards.
The Honest Tradeoffs
Savognin has 73.5km of pistes served by 12 lifts. For intermediate-to-advanced families, particularly those with teenagers who ski confidently, this terrain will feel exhausted within three or four days. There's no linked circuit, no neighbouring valley to explore on a day pass, no second ski area to add variety in week two. On day five, you'll know every run.
The Andersons, with their 14-year-old who skis reds comfortably, would find themselves repeating terrain by Wednesday. This is a meaningful limitation, and no amount of Romansh charm offsets it if your family needs new runs to stay engaged.
Beyond terrain size: ski school information in English is frustratingly sparse. We couldn't confirm group sizes, instructor qualifications, minimum ages, or lesson pricing from available online sources. For first-time families who depend heavily on ski school quality, this information gap creates real booking anxiety that the resort could easily fix with a better English-language web presence.
Piste signage has drawn specific criticism from visitors. This isn't a dealbreaker, but for families with children skiing independently for the first time, unclear markings on a run you don't know can be in reality stressful.
Finally, the off-slope offering is thin. Beyond sleigh rides and cross-country skiing, non-skiing family members, particularly a toddler's caregiver on a rest day, will find limited structured entertainment. This is a village, not a resort complex.
Our Verdict
Book Savognin if your children are under ten, your budget matters, and you want a real Swiss mountain village rather than a resort engineered for Instagram. The certified family infrastructure, the CHF 8 Flurin Child ticket, and the unhurried Romansh valley atmosphere make this one of the strongest value propositions in Graubünden for young families, first-timers especially.
Do not book Savognin if your family includes confident intermediate-to-advanced skiers who need more than four days of varied terrain, or if you require verified English-language childcare for non-skiing toddlers.
Your next step: check Ferienwohnung availability through the Savognin Tourismus website for mid-January (historically the snowiest month at 51cm average), book lift passes early to lock in the lowest dynamic pricing, and confirm ski school details directly with the resort before you commit.
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