Why Les Menuires, when the choice is yours.
Les Menuires has spent fifteen years quietly correcting its own reputation. What was, in the 1960s, the most functional and least loved of the Belleville villages — concrete blocks, working lifts, no pretence — has become, by patient stages, one of the most architecturally refined chalet-villages in the 3 Valleys. The lifts still work. The pretence is still mostly absent. That, on reflection, is the appeal.
The transformation has been concentrated in two sectors. Reberty 2000, on the south-east shoulder of the village, is now a cluster of stone-and-larch chalet hotels — the Chalet des Neiges Hermine 5*, the new private chalets at La Masse, the Roc des 3 Marmottes — with ski-in, ski-out access from every balcony. Les Bruyères, slightly higher, has become the family sector of choice: the Hôtel Le Kaya 5*, modern interpretations of the Savoyard chalet, and a quieter pedestrian street than La Croisette below. La Croisette itself remains the working centre — supermarket, ski schools, pharmacy, the bakery that opens at six — and is, in its straightforward way, more honest than the staged village squares of higher-end resorts.
The clientele follows the architecture. Les Menuires is younger and more athletic than Courchevel, more family-oriented than Val Thorens, and noticeably more French than either. You will hear French on the télécabine, English at the Hôtel Le Kaya bar, Dutch on the Bruyères magic carpet — and very few of the languages of cocktail-hour Megève. The guests here ski. They ski hard. They are the kind of guest for whom Snowtailors was, in part, made.
Les Menuires has the most generous lift-served off-piste in the 3 Valleys, and the smallest queues for it. There are mornings on La Masse where I have skied with a single family for four hours and not crossed another set of tracks. Marion Levasseur, off-piste
What we ski here.
Les Menuires is laid out as a long ribbon along the eastern flank of the Belleville valley, with two very different mountains either side of it. To the east, the broad shoulders of Mont de la Chambre and the Pointe de la Masse — pure, north-facing, often dry. To the west, the gentler ridges that climb towards Méribel via Tougnète. The combination, for an instructor working a five-day week, is unusually flexible.
Where we take beginners
La Croisette and the Reberty 1850 nursery slopes. Wide, sunlit, gentle gradient, magic carpets that run parallel to the village so a parent can sit on a terrace with a coffee and watch the morning unfold. Children progress quickly here because the flow of the area is calm — Les Menuires has invested heavily in pedestrianising and de-cluttering its beginner zones over the last five seasons.
Where we take intermediates
The full Bruyères circuit and the long crossing to Méribel via the Mont de la Chambre télécabine. From the top of Mont de la Chambre, an intermediate skier reaches the larch forests of Méribel inside thirty minutes, lunches at one of the village's altitude restaurants, and is back in Les Menuires by mid-afternoon. A five-day intermediate programme will routinely cross to Méribel twice and Val Thorens once, and still leave room for the long Bouquetin descent home.
Where we take advanced and expert skiers
La Masse is the crown jewel — and quietly the most rewarding lift-served off-piste in the 3 Valleys. From the Pointe de la Masse summit at 2 804 metres you have a thousand vertical metres of north-facing snow that holds dry into late February, with three or four distinct combes that almost no one skis on a weekday morning. The slalom stadium at Reberty is where Fabrice Galofaro takes guests for race coaching — properly timed, properly filmed, with feedback at lunch. And for guests who want to earn a descent, the Pointe de la Masse skin track is one of the best half-day ski-touring outings in the area, achievable for any reasonably fit intermediate.
For guests who want to ski everything: the high-altitude crossing to Val Thorens via the Cime Caron is a single morning's commitment, and the full 600 kilometres of the 3 Valleys remain on the same lift pass.
Where we meet you.
Les Menuires is a string of seven hamlets — Bruyères, La Croisette, Reberty 1850, Reberty 2000, Preyerand, Le Bettex and Les Bruyères proper — connected by their own ski-lift network. We meet you at the door of whichever you have chosen. For guests at the Hôtel Le Kaya, the Chalet des Neiges Hermine, or the new chalets at Reberty 2000, we have working relationships with the concierge desks and ski-room access; your instructor often arrives before the cappuccino is poured.
For guests staying in private chalets across the Bruyères and Reberty sectors, we coordinate with the rental concierge to position your equipment before breakfast — the village's high-end rentals (Cimalpes, Bramble Ski, Fish & Pips for the Belleville valley) all run smoothly with us. For guests further down the valley in Saint-Martin, we plan the morning lift sequence so that the family arrives in Les Menuires fresh and ready, then skis back home in the late afternoon.
A 5-day programme to taste the place.
This is what a typical week with Snowtailors looks like for an intermediate family of four arriving on Saturday into Les Menuires. Every detail is adjustable — the schedule below is illustrative, never imposed.
The reading morning
Three hours, on the Croisette blues and the lower Bruyères runs. Your instructor watches more than teaches — reading skiing, fitness, patience. Lunch at Le Roc des 3 Marmottes, a quiet planning conversation for the week.
La Masse, or Bruyères
The first proper day. Advanced groups go straight to La Masse for the full thousand-metre off-piste descent with Marion. Families with younger children spend the morning on Bruyères and the magic-carpet zones, with a sunny lunch at La Marmite.
Méribel via Mont de la Chambre
The crossing. Up the Mont de la Chambre, down through the Méribel larch forests, lunch at the altitude. We hold a relationship with the maître at La Bouitte if a window opens. Last lift home at 4 p.m.
Slalom morning, off-piste afternoon
The split day. Children go to the Reberty slalom stadium with Fabrice for race coaching — gates, timing, video. Parents head back up La Masse with Marion for the second descent of the week. Reunite at the Chalet des Neiges Hermine for late lunch.
Val Thorens day
The high-altitude excursion. Up via the Cime Caron, lunch at La Maison or the Chalet du Lac, the long blue descent back through Plan de l'Eau. The day on which the family realises why this lift pass costs what it does.
Friday is, traditionally, optional. Some families ask for a final morning of spring skiing on the south face of Mont de la Chambre — corn snow at 11 a.m., terrace lunch, no rush. Others request a final off-piste day on La Masse before the flight home. We organise either with twenty-four hours of notice.
Hôtels & chalets we know intimately.
Most of our Les Menuires guests stay at one of the village's serious addresses in Reberty 2000 or Bruyères. A working relationship with each of these means we are usually permitted to walk through the ski room, leave equipment in your locker, and coordinate morning timings with the concierge directly. None of this is paid placement — they are simply the people we ski with most.
- Hôtel Le Kaya, 5* — Bruyères. Modern Savoyard architecture, a quiet bar, ski-in ski-out.
- Chalet des Neiges Hermine, 5* — Reberty 2000. Our most-requested address for families of six or more, with one of the better spas in the valley.
- Le Roc des 3 Marmottes — La Croisette. Family-owned, lunch terrace open to non-residents, the kind of dining room one looks forward to.
- The new chalets at Reberty 2000 — selected private chalets through Cimalpes and Bramble Ski. Equipment delivery on arrival.
- Partner concierges across the village's higher-end rental chalets — direct WhatsApp lines, key handover, ski-room access.