Levasset Mid: In total, the combined length of the three Levasset sections is around 5km, running from Roche de Mio down to the base of the main Champagny sector (stopping at the top of the Les Bois red back to Champagny-en-Vanoise).
We’ve split Levasset into three parts for clarity. Here’s the full route: Levasset piste guide — including Levasset Haut, Levasset Mid, and Champagny Levasset.

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La Plagne intermediate piste Levasset Mid: Nothing technical here — it’s more about flow and timing. Try to carry speed early so you don’t end up shuffling across the flats near the restaurant, and stay alert at the junction where riders merge from Tome, Quillis and Levasset.
If you’re linking sectors, this little section is the gateway: Roche de Mio ↔ Champagny, plus easy access to Quillis and Carella at the bottom.
This midsection starts just after the Plateau de Carella rope tow. The riding itself is mellow, but the challenge is keeping enough speed over the flats near the Les Killis restaurant — especially when the junction gets busy and the pisteurs put up barriers to slow everyone down.
At the bottom, you can take the Quillis chair over towards Bellecôte / Belle Plagne, the Carella chair back up to Roche de Mio, or continue on the lower Champagny Levasset section which drops away just after the restaurant to the left.

Quick tip: Terrain varies a lot across La Plagne, and the wrong setup can turn an easy day into hard work. Booking ski or snowboard hire in advance means the right kit is ready, sizes are available and rental prices are cheaper online — plus you can choose a shop close to where you’re staying.
Prefer to go straight to Skiset? Book here
Levasset Mid blue: A key crossing and link piste — but it’s often busy, scraped, and the fencing + flats can make it feel like a bottleneck in an otherwise brilliant long run.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Short link piste | Beginners on pathways |
| Links Roche de Mio with Champagny | People stopping at steeps |
| Gets scraped due to heavy use | |
| Bottleneck in an otherwise great run | |
| Fences at bottom mean you will walk the flat |
Quick tip: Even straightforward pistes can change quickly with weather, visibility and traffic. Good cover means lift evacuation, medical help and rescue costs are handled if something goes wrong — which in the Alps can otherwise be expensive.
If you haven’t sorted cover yet, it’s worth doing before your trip.
Connecting pistes and lifts: Where you can go next once you finish this section.
| Connecting pistes | Connecting lifts |
|---|---|
| Levasset bas blue | Quillis fixed chair |
| Carella detachable chair |
Levasset Mid stats: Length, altitude and gradient at a glance.
| Quality | Detail |
|---|---|
| Length: | 0.4km / 0.2m |
| Start alt: | 2408m |
| End alt: | 2304m |
| Vertical drop: | 104m |
| Max gradient: | 28° |
| Graded: | Blue |
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