Getting to La Plagne is easy once you know the “shape” of the journey. Most trips boil down to: fly or train into the Alps, transfer into the Tarentaise valley, then head up the mountain to your chosen village. The only time it gets stressful is changeover day, bad weather or if you haven’t picked the right airport/transfer combination for your arrival time.
This page is a hub that pulls the best LaPlagne360 travel resources into one place. Start with best ways to reach La Plagne if you want the big-picture options, then use the quick links below for transfer times, train travel and valley buses. If you’re driving, keep an eye on the webcams and live updates in the days before you travel — they’re a sneaky-good way to predict road drama.

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Quick tip: La Plagne is one of the biggest ski areas in the world. On busy weeks, hire shops fill up fast and queues build quickly. Booking ski or snowboard hire in advance means your equipment is ready, sizes are available and you get rental prices that are cheaper online.
Choose a shop close to your accommodation so your first morning is simple.
Prefer to go straight to Skiset? Book here
Quick tip: Even on marked pistes, accidents happen. In France, rescue and evacuation costs can be charged to you. Proper ski insurance covers lift evacuation, medical care and cancellation if something goes wrong.
If you haven’t arranged cover yet, it’s worth sorting before your trip.
If you’re in planning mode, these are the questions we get asked most. For deeper detail, use the travel cards higher up the page (transfer times, train guide, bus schedules and 3D route videos).
For most people it’s a straight choice between Geneva and Chambéry. However, people often also often travel from Lyon and Grenoble. The “best” one depends on your flight times and how much you care about transfer length versus price. Use transfer times to check your airport choice before you book. However, the general rule for least stress is Geneva or Chambéry.
It varies a lot by airport, weather and traffic (especially Saturdays). Start with average transfer times to La Plagne, then double-check the day before you travel using La Plagne live and the webcams (they’re surprisingly useful for spotting snowfall/visibility that can slow the climb).
Private is simplest (door-to-door, less waiting and better if you’ve got kids or lots of luggage). But they’re expensive. Way more expensve then normal buses or trains. All depends what works for you best. Use the transfers panel in “Plan your trip” below or see best ways to reach La Plagne for a full breakdown.
Yes — it’s totally doable and can be brilliant if you hate airport faff. Geneva – normally the arrival airport for the Tarentaise – has a train station in the main airport building. From there, it’s easy. Start here: Is it possible to take the train to La Plagne?. Once you’re in the Tarentaise, use the valley bus times from Aime page if you’re not doing a taxi/transfer.
The exact station you use depends on your destination resort. All the main La Plagne resorts use train stations on the front of the Isère valley (Aime-la-Plagne and Landry). Champagny means getting off at Moûtiers. Follow the full step-by-step guide here: train to La Plagne.
If you’re driving, the valley resorts can feel less “committed” (and often calmer for parking/logistics). Plus way less headaches getting spaces or paying for car parks. That said, high-altitude villages are much more ski-convenient once you’re there. If you’re torn, have a look at which is the best La Plagne village.
It’s a mountain road, so in snow weeks it can be slow, and, in bad weather, you will need winter tyres or chains (these are legal requirements in France). If you’re travelling during/after snowfall, check the webcams for a quick visual reality check and keep an eye on your “expected traffic” panel above. Do everyone a favour – take snowchains otherwise you could cause hours of heartache/headache for other road users.
Changeover day Saturdays are the classic pinch point. If you can, travelling midweek or outside peak arrival/departure windows makes life easier. If you’re stuck with Saturday, plan extra margin and use your live/traffic info panels to choose the right moment to start the climb.
Once you’re up the mountain, local travel is mostly lifts, short walks and shuttle buses. Start here: La Plagne shuttle buses. If you’re coming up from the valley (Aime-la-Plagne), check the valley bus times.
If you’re the kind of person who likes to “pre-visualise” the journey, this is for you: La Plagne transfer videos shows 3D route videos so you can see what the climb looks like and how the resort villages links together.
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