SKIING/SNOWBOARDING

Visit This Summer-Only Ski Resort in the Alps, Plus 7 More Spots to Make Glacier Turns

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When you need your skiing fix in the summer, the high-alpine glaciers of the Alps are always an option. We’re not suggesting planning a summer ski vacation to the Europe (although, stranger things have been done…), but if you’re going to be there anyway, you might as well squeeze in a ski day or two, even if just for the novelty of it.

Also Read: Science Confirms What Skiers Already Knew: Time in the Mountains Shapes Who We Are

There are a handful of ski resorts that open back up for summer glacier skiing—and one that’s a summer-only ski resort (the one in the photo, below)—that offer creamy corn summer turns. Here’s where to find off-season skiing in the Alps.

Passo Stelvio summer skiing
Italy’s Passo Stelvio opens this weekend for the summer, which is its only operating season. Photo: Getty Images

8 Resorts in the Alps to Glacier Ski in the Summer

Austria

Hintertux

  • Summer season: open all year

There’s skiing year-round on the Hintertux Glacier, which offers a steeper pitch than other comparable glaciers in the region. Located at over 10,600 feet, Hintertux stays cool enough to hold snow even in the dog days of summer. Depending on conditions, summer skiers can expect there to be up to 10 lifts open serving 20 kilometers of runs, enough to satiate your appetite for summer turns.

Kaprun Glacier

  • Summer season: now through July 19

The Kaprun Glacier will stay open for summer skiing through mid-July thanks to its high elevation. While several ski areas comprise Kaprun Glacier skiing, the only summer skiing on tap is at Kitzsteinhorn, where there are seven lifts open. It’s pretty typical glacial terrain—open bowls with not much pitch, but the endless views make up for the lack of steep terrain.

France

Les 2 Alpes

  • Summer season: May 28-Aug. 28

Opening this weekend, Les 2 Alpes offers the closest thing to a full-scale ski operation that you’ll find in the Alps. There’s over 200 skiable acres served by two lifts and a funicular, so summer skiers can schuss down nearly 3,000 feet of vertical. Not too shabby.

Long Read: A 6,000 Vertical Foot Race Through the Alps With No Rules—What Could Go Wrong?

Tignes

  • Summer season: June 18 to July 31

Tignes boasts high elevation and comparatively good snow on the Grand Motte glacier. There’s only about 18 kilometers of terrain open, so think of it as a great way to pass a couple hours, especially considering that access via the high-speed underground funicular makes this the easiest skiing to get to from the base.

Val d’Isere

  • Summer season: June 11-July 10

Val has the shortest season of any of the summer resorts, consisting of a handful of green and blue runs on the Glacier du Pissaillas. You can’t access the glacier from the main resort, however, so factor in a 20-minute drive to the Col d’Iseran parking lot.

Italy

Cervinia/Zermatt

  • Summer season: June 24-Sept. 4

Sharing its summer-skiing slopes with Switzerland’s Zermatt, this is the highest-elevation skiing in the region and is also the most snow-sure. The summer summit is at almost 12,800 feet, and skiers can expect about 21 kilometers of pistes with amazing high-alpine views and a tamped-down, but still epically fun, après scene.

Passo Stelvio

  • Summer season: May 28-Nov. 2

This underrated little summer-only ski area near Bormio has the longest summer season—but it’s also its only season. Passo Stelvio isn’t open in the winter. The mostly gentle slopes are wide-open and accessed by cable cars from Stelvio Pass.

Switzerland

Zermatt

(see Cervinia, above)

Saas Fee

  • Summer season: July 16-Spring 2023

You have to wait a little longer for Saas Fee’s season to begin this summer, but once it does, you’re good through spring 2023, which says something about the snow surety on this glacier. There’s about 20 kilometers of on-piste skiing, mostly intermediate, and the lovely car-free village of Saas-Fee to look forward to at the end of your ski day.

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