How to Make the Most of Your Ski Trip to Verbier
How to Make the Most of Your Ski Trip to Verbier
Planning a ski trip to Verbier is about more than choosing a resort. It is about getting the details right so your time in the mountains feels easy from the moment you arrive.
Verbier has a lot to offer. Incredible terrain, some of the best off piste skiing in the Alps, and a social side that is as important as the skiing itself. But it is not always straightforward to access the best of it without a bit of planning.
The difference between a good trip and a great one usually comes down to what you organise in advance.
Book Early and Give Yourself Options
Verbier gets busy, particularly during peak weeks. The best instructors, restaurants, and accommodation are often booked well ahead of time.
If you leave things too late, you can still have a good trip, but your options become more limited. You might not ski with the right person, or miss out on the places that really make the experience.
A bit of planning early on gives you flexibility once you are here.
Over the years, I have built a small network of trusted instructors here in Verbier. Roddy’s Little Black Book is a collection of people I know personally and have skied with over many seasons. Each one has been chosen for their level of teaching, their approach, and the way they look after their clients.
It is not a directory. It is a short list of people I would recommend without hesitation.
Booking early also means I can either confirm my own availability or help match you with the right person from that network, depending on what you are looking for and when you are in resort.
Ski with the Right Instructor
Choosing the right instructor is one of the most valuable decisions you can make, and not always the easiest one to get right without local knowledge.
In Verbier, the right instructor does far more than just help your skiing.
They will guide you around the mountain, help you find the best conditions on the day, and introduce you to terrain you would not necessarily ski on your own. Over a few days, they also get a feel for how you like to ski and how to structure your time.
Good instructors here tend to play a wider role. They know the mountain, but they also know the resort.
That can mean recommending the right equipment, helping you book restaurants, pointing you towards the right après ski at the right time, and helping with practical things like doctors, dentists, or massage appointments if needed.
It all adds up to a smoother, more enjoyable trip.
Plan Your Mountain Restaurants
Lunch in Verbier is part of the day, not just a break from skiing.
Places like Chez Dany, Le Carrefour, and Le Dahu are all well known for a reason. On the right day, they are some of the best places you can be.
But they are only part of the picture.
Some of the best lunches in Verbier are not always the most obvious ones. Smaller places, quieter spots, or restaurants that only really work when the timing is right can often be just as memorable, if not more so. Often it is these quieter places that end up being the ones people remember most.
There are plenty of less obvious options worth knowing about. Places like LGP in Verbier, Chez Eddy for a more traditional Swiss cheese experience, Restaurant La Côt over in Bruson, or even somewhere simple like the Snack Bar Maison de la Forêt at the end of Vallon d’Arbi. And not forgetting the plat du jour at Au Vieux Verbier. These are the kinds of places you are unlikely to stumble across without a bit of local knowledge.
The key is knowing where to go on a particular day, depending on conditions, how busy the mountain is, and how your day is unfolding.
Booking still matters. The best tables go early, and knowing when to arrive makes a big difference. A relaxed lunch in the sun can be one of the highlights of the week, but only if it is planned properly.
Après Ski Done Properly
Après ski in Verbier is as much about timing as it is about where you go.
Places like 1936, Le Rouge, Lumi, and Farinet can be great, but they are at their best at specific times of day.
Arrive too early and it is quiet. Too late and it is crowded.
Getting it right means it feels like part of the day rather than something separate from it.
Choosing the Right Accommodation
Where you stay in Verbier has a big impact on how your week feels.
Being in the village gives you easy access to lifts, restaurants, and the overall atmosphere of the resort. It makes everything feel simple and well connected, particularly if you want to make the most of both the skiing and the social side of Verbier.
There are some great options in the centre of the resort. Hotel Le Vanessa is a well run, family owned hotel right in the heart of Verbier and works very well for many clients. At the other end of the scale, places like the W Verbier offer a more high end, international feel for those looking for that style of stay.
That said, there are also good options just below in Le Châble.
For those not looking at the very top end of the market, Le Châble can offer better value while still giving you direct access to the lift system. Hôtel A Larze is a good example, and there are also plenty of well located self catering apartments available, including options around Les Ruinettes.
Le Châble is directly connected to Verbier by the main gondola, which runs from early in the morning through until late in the evening and is included with your lift pass. It makes moving between the two very straightforward. It is also possible to store skis at the bottom lift station, as well as in Verbier at Médran or at places like Mountain Air, which means you do not need to carry equipment back and forth each day.
With a bit of planning, it can be a very easy and effective base for the week.
It is also worth being aware of how ski lessons are arranged. Many hotels will naturally recommend ski schools or organise lessons on your behalf, which is often the easiest option and works well for many visitors. However, it is not always the best way to find the right instructor. In some cases, these recommendations are influenced by existing relationships or commission arrangements, which means you are not always choosing based purely on who is the best fit for you. Taking a bit of time to choose your instructor independently can make a noticeable difference, giving you more control over who you ski with and ultimately shaping how your time on the mountain feels.
As with everything else, it comes down to how you want your week to flow. Location, access to lifts, and how you move around the mountain each day all play a part.
Make the Most of the Lift System
How you use the lift system in Verbier has a big impact on your day.
At busy times, knowing where and when to move across the mountain can save a lot of time. Small decisions around timing, lift choice, and route planning can easily add several extra runs to your day without feeling rushed.
On certain lifts, such as the Tortin gondola, priority access can make a noticeable difference. Some instructors have access to VIP lanes, which helps avoid queues and keeps the day flowing, particularly during peak weeks.
It is not something most visitors are aware of, but over the course of a week it can significantly improve how much you get out of the mountain.
Understand How the Mountain Works
Verbier is a big mountain, but more importantly it is a mountain that changes constantly. A lot of it comes down to timing.
Where the snow is good, when it is good, and how it evolves through the day all play a part. Arrive too early and you can find yourself skiing frozen, hard snow that has not softened yet. Leave it too late and the same slopes can turn heavy and slow.
There is no fixed formula to it. Every day is slightly different. Small details can make a difference, whether that is how busy the car park in Le Châble is and what that means for areas like La Chaux or Ruinettes, or where the snow has fallen overnight across the mountain. It might be snowing on Mont Fort while Verbier stays dry, or clear in Nendaz while Verbier is in cloud.
Knowing when to move, and where to go next, makes a big difference.
It is not just about following the obvious lines either. Many people head straight for the well known areas like Mont Fort, often at the same time, creating queues and spending a large part of the day in lifts. In doing that, they often miss some of the best skiing on the mountain.
There is a lot of value in what sits in between. Quiet slopes, less obvious lines, and small pockets of good snow that are not immediately visible. On the right day, these can offer better skiing with far fewer people.
Finding those areas, and knowing when they are at their best, is what really changes the experience.
It is also how you make the most of your time. Less waiting, more skiing, and a day that flows naturally rather than feeling stop start.
Where to Go on a Powder Day
Powder days in Verbier tend to follow a pattern. When it snows, most people head straight for the obvious lifts like Mont Fort, Tortin, and the main itineraries. It is understandable, but it often leads to long queues and snow that is tracked out quickly. The trick is not to follow the pattern that everyone else is following. There is usually a better way to approach it. Rather than rushing straight to the headline runs, it is worth thinking about timing and movement, where the snow has settled well, which aspects are holding it best, and how quickly different areas will fill up. Often the best skiing is found just off that main flow, in areas that take a little more thought to reach or that people pass through on their way somewhere else. Early in the day, these can offer fresh snow with far fewer people. It is also about sequencing. Let the busy lifts clear while you ski quieter terrain, then move across the mountain as the day opens up. A good powder day is not about chasing the same lines as everyone else, but about staying one step ahead of where the crowds are going.
The Details Around the Skiing
A great trip is not just about the hours on snow. It is about how everything fits together. Where you stay, how your days flow, and where you end up in the evening all play a part. The best trips tend to feel easy, and that usually comes from having the right advice early on and making a few good decisions before you arrive. Verbier rewards a slightly more considered approach. If you plan ahead, ski with the right people, and have a bit of local knowledge behind you, everything starts to fall into place. You ski better, you see more of the mountain, and you enjoy the whole experience in a different way.
Final Thought
Verbier is one of the best places in the world to ski.
Make a few good decisions early, and it becomes something much more than just a ski trip.
If you would like help planning your time in Verbier, or finding the right instructor for your trip, you can get in touch here

Roddy Willis 

