The birthplace of alpinism, where skiing is still an adventure sport.
Computed from mapped terrain data — no editorial opinion, no pay-to-rank. How the score works
Chamonix is not a ski resort; it's a mountain town that happens to have lifts. Sprawled beneath Mont Blanc, Western Europe's highest peak, it staged the very first Winter Olympics in 1924 and has been the world capital of alpinism since the Compagnie des Guides — the oldest mountain-guiding company on Earth — was founded here in 1821. The valley's separate ski areas (Brévent-Flégère, Grands Montets, Balme, Les Houches) each face the Mont Blanc massif like balconies at a theatre.
What Chamonix sells is vertical and wildness. The Aiguille du Midi cable car hoists you to 3,842 m, where the Vallée Blanche begins: twenty-odd kilometres of glacier descent past seracs and crevasse fields down to the Mer de Glace — the most famous off-piste run in the world, and one you do with a guide. Even the pisted skiing feels big: Grands Montets' north faces hold cold snow for weeks, and steep-skiing history has been written on the slopes in every direction.
The town matches the terrain: gritty, international, and buzzing year-round with climbers, wingsuit pilots and skiers comparing lines over cheap pasta and good beer.
The world's most famous glacier run — about 20 km from the Aiguille du Midi to the valley, guided, wild, unforgettable.
High, cold, and serious: the Pointe de Vue and Bochard descents deliver some of the biggest lift-served verticals in the Alps.
France's classic World Cup downhill, weaving through forest with Mont Blanc filling the sky ahead.
Every run measured from elevation-aware map geometry: true length, vertical drop, average gradient and a 0–10 slope score that rewards long, sustained descents.
| Run | Difficulty | Length | Vertical | Avg grade | Slope score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Planards | Easy | 901 m | 178 m | 19.8% | 2.7 |
| Stade de slalom | Intermediate | 333 m | 112 m | 33.7% | 2.9 |
| Grépon | Beginner | 322 m | 49 m | 15.2% | 1.5 |
| Blatière | Beginner | 147 m | 19 m | 12.9% | 1.0 |
| Liaison | Beginner | 67 m | 4 m | 6% | 0.5 |
| Grépon | Beginner | 58 m | 6 m | 10.3% | 0.8 |
| Blatière | Beginner | 52 m | 3 m | 5.7% | 0.4 |
| Planards | Easy | 44 m | 9 m | — | 0.1 |
4 mapped lifts, moving up to 2,670 skiers per hour.
| Lift | Type | Capacity/h | Ride time | Length | Vertical |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Planards | Chairlift | 1,870 | — | 611 m | 177 m |
| Grépon | Platter lift | 800 | — | 314 m | 49 m |
| Blaitière | Platter lift | — | — | 113 m | 19 m |
| Jardin d'enfants | Magic carpet | — | — | 37 m | 5 m |
Les Planards (Chamonix) has 8 mapped downhill runs totalling about 1.9 km of pistes, with the longest single run measuring 901 m.
The mapped skiable terrain spans 195 m of vertical, from 1055 m at the base to 1249 m at the top.
Les Planards (Chamonix) operates 4 mapped lifts moving up to 2,670 skiers per hour.
Every run and lift on this page, rendered in interactive 3D — and it keeps working in airplane mode at the top of the mountain. Free on the App Store.
826.8 km pistes · 1339 runs · 170 lifts
539.9 km pistes · 924 runs · 163 lifts
175.4 km pistes · 300 runs · 74 lifts
303.1 km pistes · 421 runs · 91 lifts
299.7 km pistes · 440 runs · 107 lifts
267.7 km pistes · 488 runs · 80 lifts