Why Méribel, when the choice is yours.
Méribel was founded in 1938 by a Scottish colonel, Peter Lindsay, who came looking for a quiet alternative to Sankt Anton during the war years. He found a high pasture above the Doron valley, signed an architectural code that permitted only larch and stone, and held to it. Eighty-eight years later, no chalet in Méribel may be built in concrete. The village remains the most legibly alpine in the 3 Valleys.
The British soul has stayed. Méribel hosts the British Club, the most established expat institution in the French Alps; the architecture is wood and slate; the rhythm is slower than Val Thorens and considerably less public than Courchevel. Families return for ten, fifteen, twenty consecutive seasons. There is an unspoken understanding that you greet the lift attendants by name by Wednesday.
The skiing reflects all of this. Méribel sits at the geographic centre of the 3 Valleys — Mottaret connects east to Courchevel via the Saulire, west to Val Thorens via Mont Vallon and Tougnète. From a single morning lift, a private instructor can take a family in any of three directions. The terrain is the most varied in the area: tree-lined and sheltered when the wind is up, open and wide on the Tougnète face, and properly serious on Mont Vallon when conditions allow. For families that want one base from which to sample everything, Méribel is the quiet answer.
Méribel is the village where families don't change resort. They change house, sometimes; they don't change valley. Antoine Sangouard, founder
What we ski here.
Méribel offers the most balanced ski domain in the 3 Valleys. The major lifts — Saulire Express, Tougnète, Plan des Mains, Plattières, Mont Vallon, Roc de Fer — open access to wildly different snow conditions on the same day. We tend to start east in the morning when the sun first hits Saulire, work west toward Tougnète before lunch, and finish at Mont Vallon in the afternoon shadow.
Where we take beginners
The Altiport — Méribel's small airstrip — and the Mottaret beginner park beneath the Plattières. The Altiport flat doubles as a learning zone in the morning, with magic carpets, a covered children's lounge, and the gentlest blue piste in the area returning to the village door. Mottaret's beginner zone is higher, snow-sure, and shielded from the late-March sun. Justine Guyon, our family-programme lead, teaches here several days a week.
Where we take intermediates
The Tougnète red descents — quietly the longest sustained reds in the 3 Valleys. The Roc de Fer Olympic course, home of the 1992 women's downhill, perfectly groomed on Tuesday mornings. The full crossing to Courchevel via Saulire and back through Vizelle. An intermediate week routinely covers 250 kilometres of pistes, including two or three afternoons in Courchevel and one full day to Val Thorens.
Where we take advanced and expert skiers
Mont Vallon. The Combe du Vallon descent is, by some quiet consensus, one of the great underrated runs in France — 1 000 vertical metres on a north face that holds dry snow into April, two off-piste couloirs flanking the marked piste, and a chairlift that returns you in twelve minutes. The off-piste behind Saulire (shared with Courchevel), the Roc des Trois Marches face, and the long itinerary down to Saint-Martin via the Cherferie ridge are all within a single day's reach. For the keenest skiers, the Mont du Vallon couloirs offer Chamonix-style terrain without the Chamonix exposure.
Where we meet you.
Méribel is laid out across three villages — Méribel village (1 450 m), the Belvédère and Rond Point quarters above it, and Méribel-Mottaret (1 750 m) higher up the valley. We meet you at your chalet door, regardless of quarter. For guests at Le Coucou, Hôtel Le Kaïla, La Bouitte (Saint-Martin proper, but most Méribel guests dine and sometimes sleep there) or in the private chalets of Belvédère and Rond Point, your instructor walks through the ski room, collects equipment from the locker, and waits at the door at the agreed time.
For families with very young beginners staying in Mottaret, we recommend skipping the morning lift sequence altogether — the village beginner area is fifty metres from most chalet doors, and the connection to the wider domain can wait until the second day. For families staying lower in the valley (Méribel village proper, Le Raffort, Les Allues), we coordinate the morning gondola schedule so that you arrive at the upper lifts unhurried and warm.
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. Every detail is adjustable — the schedule below is illustrative, never imposed.
The reading morning
Three hours, on the Altiport blue and Cherferie. Your instructor watches more than teaches — reading skiing, fitness, jet-lag and the dynamic between family members. Lunch at L'Arpasson on the Tougnète piste, a quiet planning conversation for the week.
Across to Courchevel via Saulire
Full day. The Saulire summit, descent into Courchevel via the Combe de la Saulire, lunch at Le Cap Horn beside the altiport, return through Vizelle and the Burgin shoulder. The first day on which the family realises the area is properly large.
Tougnète, full day
The Tougnète face, in full. A morning of long red cruising — Combe Tougnète, Crêtes, Lapin — then a long lunch at Le Plan des Mains and afternoon laps on the Olympic Roc de Fer. The skiing day that most resembles a serious training day.
Children's morning, parents' Mont Vallon
Two instructors. The children spend the morning at the Altiport with Justine Guyon; the parents take the Mont Vallon chairlift with a second instructor for two laps of the Combe and one of the off-piste couloirs alongside. Reunite at the Hôtel de la Loze for a slow lunch.
Saulire off-piste
For the strong skiers — a morning behind Saulire, descending the hidden bowls toward 1550. Lunch at La Soucoupe, then an afternoon return via the long itinerary back to Méribel. Avalanche kit, single instructor, no other parties on the line.
The Olympic finale on Roc de Fer
Half-day. The full Olympic Roc de Fer descent — properly steep, properly long — and a final coffee at La Folie Douce Méribel before the afternoon transfer. The week's farewell run.
We adjust the order constantly. A north wind sends us to Mont Vallon early; fresh snow sends us to Saulire first. The week is a frame, not a script.
Hôtels & chalets we know intimately.
Méribel concentrates the highest density of catered chalets in the 3 Valleys, alongside a small number of properly serious hotels. A working relationship with each address 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 houses we ski with most.
- Le Coucou Méribel, 5* — Maisons Pariente. Slope-side on the Rhodos piste, brilliant for long lunches.
- Hôtel Le Kaïla, 5* — the Tuaillon family. Quiet, central, our most-requested address for couples.
- La Bouitte, Relais & Châteaux — three Michelin stars, in Saint-Martin proper, but where most Méribel guests dine.
- Hôtel Le Grand Cœur & Spa, 5* — historic, in the village proper, beloved by returning British families.
- Hôtel L'Hélios, 5* — Mottaret, ski-in, ski-out, recently refurbished.
- Selected private chalets — Belvédère, Rond Point, Méribel-Mottaret. Equipment delivery on arrival.