Champoluc: piste guide

Explore the three valley network from Champoluc
Explore the three valley network from Champoluc

Extent of the slopes

The gondola from Champoluc goes up to Crest, a mid-mountain nursery area with a further gondola followed by a slow quad chairlift going on to Colle Sarezza. This area is linked to the runs above Frachey via a steep, narrow, bumpy red run, known as the Goat, because of the statue at the top; timid intermediates are better off starting at Frachey. From there, you ride lifts to Colle Bettaforca, for the descent to Gressoney.

Fast lifts

Most lifts are fast chairs and gondolas, but the link with Frachey involves slow chairs. You can avoid these by using the Frachey funicular.

Read the rest of the Champoluc guide

Queues

Mostly blissfully queue-free. But there are two problems at Frachey. The Alpe Mandria chair above the funicular is an unavoidable bottleneck. And the old double chair that links to the home slopes of Champoluc cannot cope with afternoon demand.

Terrain parks

There isn't one.

For experts

Off-piste is the main attraction. There are few tough on-piste runs. In bad weather, head for the excellent Mandria forest area above Frachey for powder.

For intermediates

There is a good mix of varied pistes that suit confident intermediates. But Champoluc has drawbacks for timid intermediates – as well as the Goat run, the red descent to Champoluc (excellent if you can hack it) can be too much for many. Some people find it worth going to the separate Antagnod area.

For beginners

The high nursery slopes at Crest above Champoluc, served by two moving carpets, are excellent. For longer gentle runs, though, you need to go up the valley to Frachey. Or down the valley to Antagnod.

Snowboarding

Great off-piste for experts but not ideal for intermediates or beginners (see above). No drag lifts to worry about though.

For cross-country

There are 17km of trails in Champoluc; but Brusson, down-valley, has the best loops (30km).

Schools and guides

We lack recent reports on the Italian ski schools but have good reports of the Ski 2 ski school (‘good, friendly instructors’).

Families

Tour operator Ski 2 has all kinds of schemes to keep children happy. And it runs Ski 2 Racing courses for would-be Olympians.

Where to Ski

This guide is taken from Where to Ski, edited by Chris Gill.

where to ski
where to ski

Champoluc Hotels