
Eight villages, three valleys, six hundred kilometres of pistes — a single lift pass. At the heart of the French Alps, Les 3 Vallées is a landscape without equal.
From the shores of Lake Geneva to the Mediterranean, the French Alps unfold across eight hundred kilometres of peaks, glaciers and alpine meadows. Their highest summit, Mont Blanc, rises 4,809 metres — the roof of western Europe.
For over a century, Savoie and the Haute-Tarentaise have drawn travellers seeking something the cities cannot offer: silence, light, and the unmistakable clarity of mountain air.


Le domaine des 3 Vallées connects eight villages across three parallel alpine valleys — Belleville, Courchevel and Méribel — into a single, unbroken ski area.
With 600 km of groomed pistes, 160 lifts and a peak elevation of 3,230 metres, it remains the largest linked ski area in the world. A single pass takes you from the glaciers of Val Thorens to the wooded pistes of La Tania.
The Belleville valley rises from Saint-Martin's quiet stone hamlet through Les Menuires to the glaciers of Val Thorens — Europe's highest resort at 2,300 metres.
In the Courchevel valley, altitudes climb from La Tania through Courchevel 1550, 1650 and 1850 — the last synonymous with haute couture, Michelin stars and private-jet arrivals.
The Méribel valley sits at the heart of the domain, its chalets built in the traditional Savoyard style thanks to an early-century architectural charter.


Winter defines the 3 Valleys, but summer reveals another landscape: mountain-biking trails, alpine lakes for swimming, via ferrata, and the scent of wild thyme on high pastures.
Whatever the season, the rhythm is the same — days spent outside, long tables at twilight, and the pleasure of returning home to a chalet that already feels like your own.

