Ski Guides

Click here for a ski insurance quotation

Resort information for Serre-Chevalier

Piste Rating for Serre-Chevalier

Beginners4 star for beginners4 star for beginners4 star for beginners4 star for beginners
Intermediates4 star for beginners4 star for beginners4 star for beginners4 star for beginners
Experts3 star for beginners3 star for beginners3 star for beginners
Transfer Times
Turin1.5 hours
Grenoble2 hours
Lyon3 hours
Direct Travel
ski guides based on

Useful Resort Contacts

Generation Snow Ski School0033 492 242151
Tourist Information0033 492 249898
Hotel Auberge de Choucas0033 492 244273
Hotel Alliey0033 492 244002
Medical – Dr Assor0033 492 244254
Allo Taxi0033 492 240558

The Ski Resort

Serre-Chevalier is made up of a string of 13 villages set on a valley floor running roughly north-west to south-east. It is not a smart resort, in any sense. Although each of its parts is based on a simple old village, there is a lot of modern development, which ranges from brash to brutal, and even the older parts are roughly rustic rather than chocolate-box pretty. However, with its unpretentious charm, we find the place as a whole easy to like, with reporters stressing how friendly and welcoming the local people are. This is a family resort, which fills up with French children in the school holidays. Ski-buses, covered on the free guest card and all lift passes, circulate around each village and link all the lift bases along the valley, but they finish quite early.

The Ski Slopes

Trees cover almost two-thirds of the mountain, providing some of France’s best bad-weather terrain. Serre-Chevalier’s 250km/155 miles of pistes are spread across four main sectors above the four main villages – the most extensive Villeneuve; Chantmerle well below the tree line, Briancon and Le Monetier. Most slopes face north or north-east and so hold snow well, especially high up. The weather pattern is different here from that of the northern Alps and Serre-Chevalier can get good snow when there is a shortage elsewhere, and vice versa. A range of big lifts means there are few problems getting out of the valley, but the many old, slow lifts at altitude still cause queues.

Après Ski

Mountain restaurants are quite well distributed and there are some good places to stop. Restaurants in the villages are unpretentious and traditional, and the nightlife seems to revolve around the few bars, scattered through the various villages, with several reporters complaining that the resort is too quiet.

We'd like to wish you an enjoyable holiday in the snow and please don't hesitate to get in touch with us if you have any queries regarding your insurance cover.

Get a travel insurance quote.