Les Gets is a traditional Haute-Savoie village at ~1,172 m that grew into a family-friendly Portes du Soleil base. Wooden chalet architecture and a compact centre feel closer to Morzine than to Avoriaz‘s cliff-top blocks. Quick links toward Châtel and Switzerland suit intermediates who want wooded reds without extreme pitch.
Mountain culture & milestones
Les Gets retains farming and craft heritage – the Musée de la Musique Mécanique and summer agricultural fairs predate lift tourism.
The village hosted Mountain of Hell downhill mountain-bike races – summer bike culture matches winter ski identity.
Valley bases: where to stay
Lodging clusters around the Chavannes lift and main street – most apartments are walking distance to pistes.
Higher chalets toward Mont Chéry need a short drive; confirm parking with your rental agency.
| Village | Yükseklik | Domain role |
|---|---|---|
| Morzine | ~1,000 m | Valley hub, wooded runs, après |
| Avoriaz | ~1,800 m | Car-free plateau, cliff-top architecture |
| Les Gets | ~1,172 m | Family reds, quick Swiss links |
| Châtel | ~1,200 m | Traditional chalets, Linga lifts |
Ski sectors at a glance
Chavannes and Rosta provide family blues; Mont Chéry adds steeper north-facing pitch.
Links toward Morzine and Avoriaz cross Les Pleney sector – morning queues build on UK arrival Saturdays.
The mountain & skiing
Portes du Soleil pass tours reach Châtel, Morzine, Avoriaz, and Swiss villages – Les Gets is a calm start point before cols.
Mont Chéry blacks suit confident intermediates on groomed snow; trees shelter runs when Avoriaz whiteouts.
The Kids Parkway and nursery zones near Chavannes suit ski-school weeks – meeting points are signed clearly.
Lower altitude than Avoriaz means check sector reports – rain in the village while snow holds at 1,800 m is common in March.
The village & après-ski
Main street restaurants mix fondue, pizza, and British pubs. Après is family-friendly compared with Val d’Isère – terraces fill after 16:00.
Tuesday market and local fromageries support self-catering chalets; Morzine has larger supermarkets a short drive away.
Snow & season
North-facing Mont Chéry holds cold snow after thaw. Valley-level rain pushes groups up lifts toward Morzine and Avoriaz links.
Snowmaking backs beginner zones; natural snow depth matters more here than at Tignes glacier altitude.
Summer & year-round
Les Gets Bike Park on Mont Chéry is a summer draw – gondola uplifts carry downhill riders. Hiking trails link to Mont Blanc views on clear days.
Mechanical music museum and village festivals run July–August when ski lifts switch to bike mode.
Safety & mountain etiquette
Mont Chéry steeps ice up before village runs – match ability to morning conditions. Border tours need passport and return lift awareness.
Narrow chalet lanes ice over – winter tyres recommended for drivers staying outside the centre.
Who it suits best
Families who want Portes du Soleil access with nursery slopes and village charm. Intermediates touring reds toward Châtel and Morzine.
Expert groups chasing only steep couloirs may day-trip to Avoriaz or Switzerland; Les Gets rewards cruisers.
Getting there
Air gateways (km only): Geneva Airport (~85 km), Lyon–Saint-Exupéry (~200 km).
External links
This guide is published by Alps2Alps for general information only. It is not affiliated with Wikipedia or any resort, airport, or lift operator. Facts were accurate at the time of writing; always check official sources before travel.