The Alps · France
Courchevel 1850
The grande dame of alpine luxury, where the world's finest hotels and tables gather above the tree line.
- Suggested stay
- from 4 · 7 ideal · up to 10 nights
- Currency
- EUR
- Language
- French, English
- Best season
- The lifts run from early December to mid-April, with the Trois Vallées domain on broadly the same calendar. February delivers the most reliable cover and the fullest social season but coincides with French school holidays and peak rates; mid-January and the second half of March reward those who prefer quiet pistes, long light and easier restaurant tables. Christmas and New Year are the resort's grand theatre — and its most demanding period for availability.
Courchevel 1850 is the highest and most exalted of the five villages that climb the Saint-Bon valley, and for half a century it has been the benchmark against which alpine luxury is measured. The number is not a marketing flourish but an altitude in metres, and the address it denotes has come to mean something specific: ski-in, ski-out access to the largest linked ski domain on earth, the Trois Vallées, paired with a density of palace hotels and Michelin stars that no other mountain resort has matched.
What distinguishes Courchevel from its rivals is concentration. Within the wooded enclave of the Jardin Alpin alone sit Cheval Blanc, Les Airelles and L’Apogée — three of France’s officially designated Palaces — while Le K2 Palace and the serene Aman Le Mélézin hold their own ground nearby. The dining follows suit: Yannick Alléno’s Le 1947 is the only three-star table in the Alps to carry that distinction at this altitude, and the resort fields an unusual roster of two- and one-star kitchens besides, including Sébastien Vauxion’s Le Sarkara, the world’s first restaurant to win stars for dessert.
The resort wears its wealth with a certain Gallic composure. The snow front around the Rue du Rocher carries the flagships of the great Paris houses, but the prevailing register is discretion rather than display, and the most coveted experiences — a private off-piste day in the couloirs, a glacier landing from the famous sloped altiport, a sequenced tasting itinerary across three kitchens — are arranged quietly rather than advertised. Non-skiers are well served too, by branded house spas and the largest aquatic complex in the Alps.
Arrival is part of the theatre. The Courchevel altiport, with its short uphill runway carved into the mountain, admits only light aircraft and helicopters; private jets land at Geneva or Chambéry and complete the journey by air in twenty to thirty minutes, or by chauffeured car. It is a fitting prelude to a resort that has always understood that the approach, like the address, is part of what one is paying for.
Ideal for
Discerning skiers who want ski-in/ski-out palace hotels · Gastronomes pursuing high-altitude Michelin dining · Wellness-minded travellers and non-skiing companions · Families seeking discreet, full-service alpine luxury
Where to stay
The Houses
Cheval Blanc Courchevel
LVMH (Cheval Blanc) · Palace · Jardin Alpin, ski-in/ski-out
LVMH's intimate alpine maison holds just 36 rooms and suites in the prized Jardin Alpin, each with a private balcony or terrace and ski-in/ski-out access to the slopes. Interiors are contemporary and understated rather than chalet-rustic, and the service ratio is among the most generous in the resort. The Guerlain-led spa runs to an infinity-edge pool, hammam and the Orchidée prestige suite.
Why The most complete expression of palace-level service in Courchevel, anchored by the only three-star kitchen in the resort.
Dining: Le 1947 — three Michelin stars
Visit hotel →Les Airelles
Airelles (Stéphane Courbit / Maisons Pariente heritage) · Palace · Jardin Alpin, ski-in/ski-out
A Habsburg-fantasy Palace in the Jardin Alpin, Les Airelles trades in theatrical Austro-Hungarian interiors, crackling log fires and a famously indulgent children's offering. It holds roughly 44 rooms and suites across a warren of wood-panelled salons and a clutch of restaurants. The La Mer spa and direct slope access complete a self-contained world that many guests barely leave.
Why The most maximalist and family-embracing of the Courchevel palaces, with service that borders on the ceremonial.
Le K2 Palace
K2 Collection · Palace · Route de Bellecôte, ski-in/ski-out
A privately owned hamlet of interconnected chalets holding around 29 rooms, suites and freestanding suite-chalets, several with private pools. The K2 Palace carries three Michelin Keys and pairs Tibetan-inflected design with a deep wellness and dining programme. Le Sarkara, the world's first starred dessert restaurant, is its singular calling card.
Why Family-owned and quietly maverick, with a culinary identity — dessert as gastronomy — found nowhere else.
Dining: Le Sarkara — two Michelin stars (dessert-led)
Visit hotel →L'Apogée Courchevel
Oetker Collection · Palace · Jardin Alpin, ski-in/ski-out
Oetker Collection's Courchevel Palace sits at the top of the Jardin Alpin with 53 rooms, a penthouse and two private chalets, dressed in a playful India Mahdavi and Joseph Dirand interior scheme. The mood is more boutique-spirited than its larger neighbours despite the room count, with Sisley treatments in the spa and ski-in/ski-out access.
Why The Oetker name and a design-forward sensibility make this the most stylistically distinct of the Jardin Alpin palaces.
Aman Le Mélézin
Aman · Luxury ski lodge · Rue de Bellecôte, ski-in/ski-out (Bellecôte piste)
Aman's only alpine property is a deliberately restrained, minimalist counterpoint to the resort's gilded palaces, set directly on the Bellecôte piste. Rooms and suites favour pale wood, clean lines and mountain light, with the spa, pool and hydrotherapy spread across two full floors. Dining leans Japanese — washoku and tableside grill — in keeping with the house aesthetic.
Why For travellers who find the palaces too ornate, Aman offers serenity and space — luxury measured in restraint.
Le Chabichou by Stéphane Buron
Maison Chabichou (independent) · Hotel & spa · Rue des Chenus, near the Verdons gondola
An institution rather than a palace, the distinctive twin-gabled Chabichou pairs a comfortable alpine hotel and spa with one of the resort's most storied kitchens, long led by Meilleur Ouvrier de France Stéphane Buron. It is more characterful and less corporate than the Jardin Alpin grandees, with a loyal returning clientele.
Why The most genuinely Savoyard of the serious addresses — substance and a kitchen with deep history over spectacle.
Dining: Le Chabichou — Michelin-starred (see flags)
Visit hotel →Where to dine
The Tables
Le 1947 à Cheval Blanc
3 Michelin starsModern French (Yannick Alléno) · Haute cuisine, hotel restaurant
The pinnacle of alpine gastronomy — Alléno's extraction-driven cuisine in a 20-odd-cover room inside Cheval Blanc. Reserve weeks ahead.
Le Sarkara
2 Michelin starsDessert-led gastronomy (Sébastien Vauxion) · Tasting-menu dessert restaurant, hotel restaurant
A genuine one-of-a-kind: a full savoury-into-sweet tasting menu built around sugar, fruit and vegetables, at Le K2 Palace.
Pierre Gagnaire pour Les Airelles
2 Michelin starsModern French · Haute cuisine, hotel restaurant
An intimate, theatrical room inside Les Airelles carrying one of French gastronomy's most celebrated names (current-guide status flagged below).
Le Chabichou by Stéphane Buron
1 Michelin starSavoyard-rooted modern French · Haute cuisine, hotel restaurant
The resort's most storied independent kitchen — terroir-driven menus from an MOF chef and his son, with deep local roots. (Star count flagged below.)
Le Montgomerie
Creative French · Hotel gastronomic restaurant
Still an ambitious, design-driven dining room at Le K2 Altitude even after its star reset — worth a table for the K2 Collection's wider culinary project.
Le Triptyque
Contemporary brasserie · All-day hotel brasserie with slopeside terrace
Cheval Blanc polish without the three-star formality — the resort's most reliable lunch on the snow.
Le Comptoir de L'Apogée
French gourmet · Hotel gourmet restaurant
An elegant, lower-key gourmet option within an Oetker Palace — refined cooking without a multi-week reservation war.
What to do
Experiences
Private off-piste and freeride days in the Trois Vallées
Private guide / instructorski
The world's largest linked ski domain spreads across the Trois Vallées, and Courchevel 1850 sits at its gateway. State-certified instructors and the Bureau des Guides lead private off-piste and freeride days into the resort's couloirs and the wider valleys, tailored to ability and conditions.
Why A private guide unlocks the terrain beyond the groomed pistes — the real reason serious skiers choose Courchevel over its rivals.
Heli-skiing from Courchevel into the Italian Alps
Private guided / charteradventure
Helicopter drops are not permitted on French peaks, so operators reposition guests to Italian start points such as the Val d'Aosta and Sestrière for genuine heli-skiing descents, returning by air. Days run with mountain guides and are weather- and avalanche-dependent.
Why One of the few ways to access true backcountry powder from a Courchevel base, with the logistics handled end to end.
Altiport scenic and glacier flights
Private charteradventure
Courchevel's celebrated sloped altiport, perched at roughly 2,000 metres, is a destination in itself. Light aircraft and helicopters run scenic circuits over Mont Blanc and the surrounding glaciers, including landings on remote high points for a private mountain picnic.
Why A short flight from one of the world's most famous airfields delivers Mont Blanc panoramas no piste can match.
Palace spa rituals and Aquamotion
Hotel guests / by appointmentwellness
The palace spas — Guerlain at Cheval Blanc, Sisley at L'Apogée, La Mer at Les Airelles — offer bespoke treatments designed around the demands of mountain sport. For families and non-skiers, the resort's Aquamotion centre is the largest aquatic and wellness complex in the Alps.
Why Courchevel's wellness depth rivals its skiing; the branded house spas are reason enough for a non-skiing companion to come.
Private gastronomic itineraries
Concierge-arrangedculinary
With a concentration of Michelin stars unmatched at altitude — from Le 1947 to the dessert-only Le Sarkara — Courchevel rewards a planned multi-table itinerary. Concierges and the palaces' own teams arrange sequenced reservations, kitchen visits and tasting-menu pairings across the resort.
Why Few destinations let a guest dine across three-, two- and one-star kitchens within a single short stay; planning is the difference.
Snowmobiling, dog-sledding and torch-lit evenings
Private / small groupadventure
Beyond the pistes, the resort programmes after-dark snowmobile outings, husky dog-sled runs and private torch-lit descents with instructors, often finishing at a mountain restaurant for dinner before the return.
Why The evening mountain experiences turn a ski day into something more memorable — and are easily privatised.
Shopping
The Maisons
Rue du Rocher and the snow front
The epicentre of alpine luxury retail, at the foot of the pistes by the Croisette. Flagship boutiques of the major French houses sit beside fine-jewellery multi-brand spaces and high-end ski outfitters, all within a short walk of the palace hotels.
Rue de l'Église / Croisette promenade
Continuing from the snow front, this stretch concentrates fine jewellery and watches alongside resort-wear and gift retail, with multi-brand jewellers carrying the principal Place Vendôme and Swiss houses.
By appointment
Private and out-of-hours boutique appointments are routinely arranged through palace concierges · In-residence jewellery and watch presentations can be requested via the hotels
Arrival & departure
Coming & Going
Airports
One of the world's most demanding airfields: a sloped runway of roughly 537 m at about 2,000 m altitude, VFR only. Jets cannot land — access is by STOL light aircraft (e.g. Pilatus PC-12, Cessna Caravan) or, more commonly, helicopter.
The most common long-haul and private-jet gateway. Onward by helicopter to the altiport or by chauffeured car.
Closest jet-capable airport; favoured for private aviation and the shortest helicopter hop.
Alternative international and private-jet gateway with strong scheduled connections.
Private terminals
- Geneva and Chambéry operate FBO / business-aviation facilities used for onward helicopter transfer to the altiport
Meet & greet · gate escort
- Palace hotels arrange airport meet-and-greet and seamless transfer coordination
- Helicopter operators provide landside reception at gateway FBOs
First-class & arrivals lounges
- Business-aviation lounges at Geneva and Chambéry FBOs (operator-dependent)
Private transfers
- Chauffeured transfer by road from Geneva, Chambéry, Lyon or Grenoble
- Helicopter transfer to Courchevel Altiport from all major gateways
Private aviation
- Helicopter charter to Courchevel Altiport (Geneva ~30 min, Chambéry ~20 min, Lyon ~40 min)
- STOL light-aircraft charter directly into the altiport, VFR conditions permitting
- Private jets land at Geneva, Chambéry or Lyon, then transfer onward
Immigration fast-track
Fast-track and expedited handling available at gateway airports via private-aviation FBOs and hotel concierge coordination
Curator’s notes — pending verification
- Le Chabichou star count: the restaurant held two Michelin stars for ~40 years, but its own website now labels it 'Etoile Michelin' (one star) and a 2026-guide source indicates a single star, while other (likely outdated) sources still cite two. Recorded as ONE star with this caveat; verify against the live Michelin Guide before publication.
- Pierre Gagnaire pour Les Airelles: historically two Michelin stars and chef-of-record changes have been reported (e.g. an Italian-inflected reconcept under the 'Carrara'/Marco Garfagnini name in some sources). The restaurant was NOT clearly confirmed in the 2026 Michelin France list within these searches. michelinStars recorded as 2 per recent reporting but the current name and rating should be reverified directly.
- Le Montgomerie (Le K2 Altitude): previously two Michelin stars; reported to have lost them and not appear in the 2025 guide. Recorded as 0 stars; note that Le K2 Altitude is a distinct K2 Collection property adjacent to (not the same as) Le K2 Palace.
- Hotel room counts are from secondary/aggregator sources: Cheval Blanc ~36, Les Airelles ~44, Le K2 Palace ~29 (26 rooms + 3 suites + 6 suite-chalets + 4 chalets), L'Apogée 53 + penthouse + 2 chalets. Treat as approximate.
- Aman Le Mélézin re-opening date cited by search as 10 December 2026 for the coming winter; confirm exact season dates with the property.
- Website URLs: chevalblanc.com, lek2palace.com, aman.com, airelles.com, oetkercollection.com and chabichou-courchevel.com all returned content or appeared in official search results and are very likely live, but were not each individually HTTP-verified end-to-end in this session (Michelin and some pages returned 403 to the fetch tool). The specific deep-link restaurant URLs (lek2palace.com/.../le-sarkara.html, airelles.com/.../restaurants, lek2altitude.com/.../montgomerie.html) are constructed/likely paths and should be click-tested before publishing.
- Coordinates (45.4154, 6.6342) are approximate for Courchevel 1850 village centre.
- Le Sarkara is described as 'dessert-led/vegetal gastronomy' — it serves a full sweet-driven tasting progression, not solely desserts in the conventional sense.
- Shopping maison lists are representative of the snow-front/Rue du Rocher area from a secondary guide; exact tenant roster changes seasonally and should be spot-checked.