In winter Morzine is the approachable face of one of the world's biggest linked ski areas: a real market town at the bottom of the Portes du Soleil, with lifts rising straight out of the village and the snow you actually ski sitting up at altitude - a metre-deep base through the heart of the season in most years. The trades match summer's, sharpened by winter: the winding 90-minute Geneva transfer wants patience on changeover Saturdays, the village sits low enough that the home runs can thin in a warm spell, and its streets climb. Book the cold months with confidence - and if anyone's ski boots rub at 5pm, the pharmacies and the indoor pool are a five-minute walk, not a drive.
Family-fit is the weighted blend of six signals, tuned to a school-age trip, each derived from open data: maps, climate, Blue Flag, places. Open any signal to see why it scored as it did.
What you ski from here: a mid-mountain snowpack that holds around a metre through the core winter months in a typical year, one of Europe's biggest linked lift networks boarding straight from the village, and the same attractive valley setting the summer page rates - whitened. The snow figure means the slopes at altitude, not the village street.
Genuinely good-looking: a green valley ringed by 2,000-metre peaks like Nantaux and Ressachaux, with the emerald Lac de Montriond and its forested summits up the road. Classic pre-Alps drama - a notch below the glacier giants, but a proper looker.
The summer is pleasant but it's a mountain, not a beach: low-twenties July days and cool sleepable nights, with showers and afternoon storms a regular part of the picture rather than a rare interruption. Warm enough for the trails and the lake, cooler and wetter than a seafront - pack for both.
A short hop: the flight to Geneva is around an hour and a half, more than a dozen UK airports fly it, and the airport itself is compact and easy. The transfer is the one catch - around 90 minutes of valley road, run by a deep market of well-rated minibus firms - which keeps it a strong journey rather than the very easiest.
This is the soft spot. Morzine is built up the valley sides with a real pedestrian heart but no flat waterfront stroll, and most walks home climb. With a buggy you learn the contour lines fast - the genuine trade-off for a mountain village over a flat promenade town.
Remarkably complete for a village of under three thousand: a deep, well-rated restaurant scene, supermarkets, pharmacies and everyday shops, all walkable. It lives year-round rather than existing for one season - you could run a fortnight here without a car.
The activity count behind this score is the town's year-round stack, and winter keeps much of it going: the ice rink and indoor pool at the Palais des Sports, sledging, snowshoe walks bookable in the village, and a real working town to wander when the cloud sits down. The luge, bike park and rafting on the summer page sleep until the thaw.
The nearest hospital is about 16km down the valley at Cluses - a drive rather than a walk, normal for an Alpine resort.
These are taste, so they sit outside the score. Read them against what your family wants.
Summer Morzine is the relaxed face of a town famous for its winter après-ski: terraces and family-full streets in the evening, one nightclub rather than a strip of them. Lively in the centre on peak-season nights, quiet ten minutes out.
A farming village that became a resort without demolishing itself: weatherworn wooden chalets and farmhouses still anchor the centre, a market runs weekly, and the town works in every season. Busy and international in peak weeks, but never purpose-built.
Read from the price levels of the 13 most popular restaurants around the centre (Google Places). Eating out is the budget line a family meets every day.
The weather score for every month, so the season reads at a glance. Set your travel month here or by “When you're going” above.
Each bar is the ski-weather score for that month; faded months sit outside its season. Tap a month to set it - the page re-rates to match.
Package-friendlyCrystal Ski and Inghams both sell winter Morzine as a flight-plus-stay package with Geneva transfers included, between them covering most UK airports; a DIY flight + chalet works just as well.
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Fly to Geneva, then a roughly 90-minute road transfer into the Portes du Soleil, crossing the Swiss-French border on the way. The shared-minibus market runs all winter - book child seats ahead - and Crystal Ski and Inghams packages include the transfer.
Lifts board in the village and the full Portes du Soleil pass links the circuit across the French-Swiss border - Avoriaz and Les Gets are a ride away, and non-skiing days reach Thonon and Lake Geneva's shore within an easy drive.
How these were picked: at onboarding we verify the practical routes from the arrival airport and list the best option of each kind - public transport where it genuinely works well, pre-bookable transfer firms with strong ratings (we survey every airport's transfer firms on Google Places), and the hotel shuttle where that's the local pattern. Nobody pays to appear here.
Closest family-fit profiles, scored the same way.