La Tania Piste Map Download
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351,137 resort ratings from real skiers
Expert Analysis & Reviews

The Skiers' Guide to La Tania

Top Rated for
4.62 (94 Ratings)
Family Friendliness
4.52 (101 Ratings)
Groomed Runs
4.43 (102 Ratings)
Lift Efficiency
4.43 (61 Ratings)
Ski School Quality
4.43 (40 Ratings)
Intermediates
4.38 (98 Ratings)
Accommodation Options
Beginner 19%
Intermediate 38%
Advanced 33%
Expert 10%
Ranked
98th
of 270 ski resorts
Overall Rating
4.35
From 102 Reviews
109
Total Runs
1350
Bottom Elevation
2732
Top Elevation
150
Skiable Terrain

La Tania Piste Map

Grab the La Tania ski resort map below to plan your runs across this charming, purpose-built resort that sits bang in the middle of the Three Valleys, the world's largest ski area. The trail map reveals access to 109 runs served by 56 lifts, spanning from 1,350m right up to 2,732m. La Tania's terrain breaks down into 21 beginner runs, 41 intermediate runs, and 36 advanced runs, with the resort scoring particularly well for family friendliness, groomed runs, and lift efficiency.

piste map for La Tania

Best Runs in La Tania

La Tania gives you direct access to some excellent runs across the Courchevel valley, perfect for progressing your skiing or just having a blast on varied terrain. Here's what you'll want to hit:

  • Dou des Lanches (Green): A long, mellow green that winds gently from the top of the Dou des Lanches lift back down to the village, ideal for building confidence.

  • Troika (Blue): A wide, cruisy blue that runs from the top of the Loze cable car, offering great snow and an easy warm-up lap with sweeping views across the valley.

  • Col de la Loze (Blue): A scenic blue descent that takes you over the Col de la Loze, linking La Tania with Méribel whilst treating you to panoramic vistas.

  • Moretta (Blue): A tree-lined blue run down from Praz that holds snow well and offers sheltered skiing when the weather turns.

  • Combe de la Saulire (Red): A brilliant red that drops down from the Saulire summit, offering sustained pitch and excellent carving opportunities on well-groomed snow.

  • Grand Couloir (Red): A steeper, more technical red that funnels skiers down a natural gully with consistent gradient, rewarding confident intermediates with a proper thrill.

  • Pylônes (Red): A challenging red underneath the Chanrossa lift with a steep top section and undulating terrain that keeps things interesting all the way down.

  • Jockeys (Black): A steep, bumpy black that's a proper test piece, regularly moguled and demanding strong technique to navigate the fall line.

  • Combe du Saulire (Black): A long, varied black descent from the Saulire cable car with steep pitches, natural terrain features and rewarding skiing for advanced skiers looking to push themselves.